Yes, headlight restoration kits work, for a few months. The sanding and polishing steps in a $25 kit genuinely remove haze. The reason your lenses cloud back over by the next summer is the final step, the protection, and that is the part no kit does properly. Here is the honest breakdown from someone who restores headlights for a living.
What do the kits get right?
The correction. Most name brand kits include sandpaper in descending grits and a polishing compound, and that is real methodology, the same family of steps we use. If you follow the instructions carefully, you will remove oxidized material and your lenses will look dramatically better the same afternoon. The toothpaste trick works on the same principle, for about two weeks, because toothpaste is a mild abrasive.
Where do the kits fail?
Protection. Sanding strips whatever was left of the factory UV coating, so a freshly corrected lens is bare polycarbonate, the most UV vulnerable state a headlight can be in. Kits finish with a wipe on sealant, a thin film that sits on the surface like wax. In a northern climate it might buy you a year. Under St. Petersburg sun, 361 days of it a year, wipe on sealants visibly fail in months, and the lens often hazes faster than it did originally because now nothing is protecting it.
That is the whole difference between a $25 kit and professional work, and it is why kits come with no warranty at all.
What about the other common DIY problems?
Three problems come up constantly after kit jobs:
- Sanding scratches that never got removed. Each grit has to fully erase the previous grit’s scratches. Miss that and the lens looks frosted in sunlight.
- Burned paint and trim. Drill mounted pads wander. We tape and mask everything for a reason.
- Uneven correction. Deep UV damage needs coarser starting grits than the kit includes. Polishing over deep oxidation looks fine for a week, then the yellow ghosts back through.
So when does DIY make sense?
If the car is worth under a couple thousand dollars, you enjoy the work, and you accept redoing it every few months, a kit is a fine purchase. No judgment, that is a rational trade.
If you want it done once, the math favors doing it properly. Our full restoration is $220 for both lenses: grit matched wet sanding for the actual damage depth, machine polishing, and a ceramic coating that chemically bonds to the polycarbonate instead of sitting on it. That bond is why we can put a 3 year warranty on the work, with a lifetime option, while the kit box promises nothing. And if the result is not perfectly clear, you do not pay.