Street Legal Golf Cart Requirements: The LSV Guide

What makes a golf cart street legal? Learn the low-speed vehicle (LSV) equipment requirements, registration and insurance basics, and how to get a street legal golf cart. Call 1-888-468-8085.

Many buyers want a golf cart they can legally drive on public roads — to run errands, visit neighbors, or get around a community. To do that, the cart usually needs to qualify as a street-legal low-speed vehicle (LSV). A standard golf cart and a true LSV are not the same thing.

This guide explains what makes a golf cart street legal, the safety equipment an LSV must have, how registration and insurance generally work, and the best way to get a road-ready cart. Because rules vary by state and even by city, always confirm the specifics where you live.

Golf cart vs. low-speed vehicle (LSV)

A traditional golf cart is designed for golf courses and private property and typically tops out around 15–19 mph. A low-speed vehicle (LSV) — sometimes called a neighborhood electric vehicle (NEV) — is a distinct federal vehicle class capable of roughly 20–25 mph and built to be driven on many public roads with lower speed limits.

Because an LSV can legally use public roads, it must meet federal safety-equipment standards that a basic golf cart does not.

Required LSV safety equipment

Under the federal low-speed vehicle standard, an LSV must be equipped with a defined set of safety features. These generally include headlamps, front and rear turn signals, tail lamps, stop (brake) lamps, reflex reflectors, one or more rearview mirrors, a parking brake, a windshield, seat belts, and a 17-character vehicle identification number (VIN).

This is the key difference between a genuine factory LSV and a basic cart with an aftermarket 'street-ready' kit. A factory LSV is built and certified to meet the standard, while a bolt-on kit may not qualify the cart for registration. If road use matters to you, prioritize a true LSV.

Registration and insurance

Because an LSV has a VIN and meets the federal equipment standard, it can typically be titled, registered, and insured like other vehicles — and drivers usually need a valid driver's license to operate one on the road. Standard golf carts, by contrast, often cannot be registered for general road use.

The specifics — where LSVs may be driven, the maximum road speed limit they're allowed on, registration steps, and insurance requirements — are set by each state and sometimes by local governments. Always check with your state's motor vehicle department and your local authorities before driving on public roads.

How to get a street legal golf cart

The simplest path is to buy a factory street-legal cart that already meets LSV requirements. The Club Car Onward LSV, for example, comes from the factory with the required lighting, mirrors, seat belts, and windshield, so it's a genuine low-speed vehicle out of the box — no aftermarket conversion required. Denago also offers street-legal-configured electric models.

Converting a standard cart is possible but can be more complicated and may not result in a cart that qualifies for registration, depending on your area. Buying a purpose-built LSV avoids that uncertainty.

Is a street legal cart right for you?

If you only drive on a golf course or private property, a standard cart is perfectly fine and less expensive. If you want to run errands, cross public streets, or drive around a community legally, invest in a true LSV.

Golf Carta stocks street-legal (LSV) carts alongside standard models, updated daily. Browse the inventory or call 1-888-468-8085 and we'll help you find a road-ready golf cart and answer questions about the requirements in your area.

Browse the full golf cart inventory or call 1-888-468-8085 to find the right golf cart.

Call 1-888-468-8085 to buy a golf cart today.