All Places
This is the full directory of Florida golf cart businesses — dealers, rental fleets, repair shops, parts suppliers, custom builders, and street-legal LSV specialists. Use it to compare nearby options, check reviews and map locations, and shortlist a few businesses before you call.
Searching for a specific area? Browse by city or enter a ZIP code to find the businesses closest to you, then open individual listings to compare websites, review signals, and the exact services each shop offers.
Whether you want to buy, rent, repair, or register a cart, the answers below cover the questions Florida shoppers ask most — from costs and batteries to street-legal rules and insurance.
Florida golf cart directory — FAQ
What kinds of businesses are listed in the directory?
You will find dealers selling new and used carts, rental fleets, repair and service shops, parts suppliers, custom builders, and specialists who build registered street-legal low-speed vehicles across Florida.
How is the directory organized?
Listings are grouped by Florida city and by service type, so you can start from a market like Miami, Tampa, or Naples, or filter to the exact service you need before opening individual business profiles.
How do I find businesses near me?
Browse the city directories or use the ZIP code search on the home page to jump to the closest markets. Each city page gathers nearby dealers, rentals, and service shops in one place so you can compare without endless tabs.
How do I choose between two nearby businesses?
Open each listing and compare website, Google review signals, map location, and whether they handle your specific need — sales, rentals, repairs, parts, or a street-legal build — then contact the best fit directly.
How much does a cart cost in Florida?
Used models often start a few thousand dollars, new electric models commonly run mid-single-digit thousands, and fully built street-legal LSVs cost more once you add lithium batteries, lift kits, and lighting. Comparing several nearby dealers is the quickest way to gauge a fair local price.
Should I rent or buy?
Renting suits a vacation week, a wedding, or trying a model before you commit, while buying makes sense if you ride daily in a cart-friendly community. The directory lists both rental fleets and dealers so you can weigh weekly rates against purchase prices in one market.
Electric or gas — which should I pick?
Electric models are quieter, cheaper to run, and easy to charge overnight, which suits most neighborhood and beach driving. Gas models offer longer range and quick refueling for larger properties. Dealers in the directory can walk you through the trade-offs for your terrain.
Are street-legal carts and LSVs included?
Yes. Many listings flag whether a shop builds or services registered low-speed vehicles, which need lights, signals, mirrors, seat belts, a VIN, registration, and insurance to drive legally on approved Florida roads.
How do I register and insure a street-legal LSV?
A low-speed vehicle is titled and registered with the state like a car and needs Florida insurance. A qualified dealer or builder from the directory can supply the paperwork, VIN documentation, and required safety equipment so it passes registration.
How long do batteries last in Florida heat?
In Florida heat, lithium packs typically last seven to ten years and lead-acid batteries closer to four or five. Charge after each use, keep terminals clean, and have a repair shop test pack health before you buy a used model.
What should I check before buying used?
Inspect battery age and charge, tires, brakes, and frame, and ask for service history. Replacement battery cost matters most, so a pre-purchase inspection from a nearby repair shop can save you from an expensive surprise.
Where can I drive in Florida?
Cart-friendly communities, beach towns, downtown districts, and retirement villages allow carts on approved streets and paths, but rules vary by city and HOA. Confirm where carts are permitted locally, and use the city pages here to find shops that know your area.
Can I tow or transport a cart between Florida cities?
Yes. Many owners move a cart on a small trailer or in a pickup bed, and some dealers and rental fleets offer delivery and pickup for a fee. If you are relocating across the state or heading to a seasonal rental, ask a nearby business about transport options, secure tie-down points, and whether they can service the vehicle on arrival before your first ride.
Do you cover the whole state of Florida?
Coverage is statewide and growing, with the deepest listings in major metros and popular beach and retirement communities. New markets are added only once we have real, verified businesses rather than placeholder filler.
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