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Do Golf Buggies Damage Grass? The Honest Turf Answer

Do Golf Buggies Damage Grass? The Honest Turf Answer

Yes, buggies can damage turf, but a 450kg buggy actually presses on the ground more gently than a walking golfer's heel. What really wrecks grass is how you drive.

Hawke Editorial Team·5 July 2026·8 min read

Yes, golf buggies can damage grass, but the vehicle itself is rarely the villain. What actually wrecks turf is weight per wheel, ground conditions and driver behaviour, and on all three counts a modern electric buggy scores far better than most people assume. A 450kg buggy spreads its load across four wide tyres, so as a rough guide it presses on the ground with less force per square centimetre than a walking golfer's heel does mid-stride.

That surprises greenkeepers' committee members every time. It doesn't mean you can drive anywhere in any weather, though. Turf damage is real, it's expensive to repair, and it follows predictable patterns. Once you understand the four ways buggies actually hurt grass, protecting a lawn, fairway or estate becomes mostly a matter of habit.

Key takeaways
  • A typical 450kg buggy carries roughly 110 to 120kg per wheel, spread over a wide tyre contact patch, so its ground pressure is lower than a person's heel strike.
  • The four real damage mechanisms are shear from tight turns on wet turf, compaction from repeated identical routes, rutting on saturated ground and frost bruising.
  • Turf tyres run at low pressures (often 8 to 12 psi), varied routes and the 90-degree cart rule prevent most damage.
  • Wet autumn ground and frosty mornings are when buggies genuinely harm grass; dry summer turf shrugs them off.
  • Electric buggies drip no fuel or oil, so they avoid the chemical scorch marks petrol machines can leave on fine turf.

How heavy is a golf buggy per wheel?

Start with the numbers, because they're reassuring. A two-seat electric buggy typically weighs 400 to 500kg with batteries. Add two adults and clubs and you might reach 650kg. Divide that across four wheels and each corner carries roughly 160kg at worst.

Now look at the contact patch. A turf tyre at low pressure flattens against the ground and spreads that load over a large area, often several hundred square centimetres per tyre. The result is ground pressure in the region of 0.3 to 0.5kg per square centimetre. Compare that with a 85kg golfer walking: each heel strike concentrates most of their body weight onto a patch smaller than a playing card, which works out at several times the pressure a buggy tyre applies. Golf courses have known this for decades, which is why well-managed buggy traffic on dry fairways leaves no visible trace while a busy walking line to a tee can wear bare.

Lithium batteries help too. Swapping a lead-acid pack for lithium typically removes 80 to 120kg from the vehicle, which drops the load on every wheel. If turf care is a priority, a lighter lithium build with proper turf tyres is the kindest spec you can buy. Our guide to lithium versus lead-acid batteries covers the weight difference in detail.

So how do buggies actually damage grass?

Four ways, and only one of them involves the buggy's weight directly.

Shear from tight turns

This is the big one. Turn sharply on wet turf and the inside wheels scrub sideways, tearing the grass plant away from its roots. You've seen the result: crescent-shaped scars near greens and tees. It's a driving problem, not a vehicle problem, and it's why courses enforce wide, gentle turns.

Compaction from repeated routes

Grass tolerates occasional traffic well. What it can't tolerate is the same wheel line every day. Repeated passes squeeze the air out of the soil, roots suffocate, and you get those pale, thin ribbons of grass along popular buggy lines. The fix costs nothing: vary the route.

Rutting on saturated ground

When soil is waterlogged it has almost no bearing strength. Even a light vehicle sinks, and once a wheel cuts through the turf surface you're left with ruts that need physical repair. No tyre or driving technique fixes this. If the ground squelches underfoot, the buggy stays in the shed.

Frost bruising

Frozen grass blades are brittle. Drive or even walk on frosted turf and the leaf cells rupture, leaving blackened tyre prints that show up days later and last for weeks. Greenkeepers delay play on frosty mornings for exactly this reason, and buggies should wait too.

Buggy damage risk by ground condition, and what good practice looks like
Dry summer turf
Damage risk
Low. Healthy, firm ground carries buggy traffic with no visible wear.
Sensible practice
Normal use. Vary routes, keep turns wide, stay off greens and surrounds.
Wet autumn ground
Damage risk
Moderate to high. Shear on turns and rutting where soil is soft.
Sensible practice
90-degree cart rule, buggies on paths near greens, no tight turns, consider path-only days after heavy rain.
Saturated or waterlogged
Damage risk
Severe. Ruts cut through the surface and need physical repair.
Sensible practice
No buggy access. This is what course-closed and path-only signs are for.
Frost or freeze-thaw
Damage risk
High. Bruised, blackened blades plus root damage during thaw.
Sensible practice
Delay until the frost lifts fully, usually late morning. Freeze-thaw days are worse than hard frost.

What actually protects the grass?

Tyres first. Proper turf tyres have a shallow, rounded tread that grips without digging, and they're designed to run soft, often 8 to 12 psi. Overinflating them is the most common mistake we see: a hard tyre shrinks the contact patch and concentrates the load, undoing the buggy's natural advantage. Check pressures monthly. Our guide to electric golf buggy tyres explains the tread types and pressures properly.

Then it's route discipline. The 90-degree rule (stay on the path until you're level with your ball, cross the fairway at a right angle, then return the same way) exists because it minimises the distance driven on grass and spreads what traffic remains. Varying entry and exit points stops compaction ribbons forming. And a four-wheel buggy spreads load better than an older three-wheel design, which puts a third of the vehicle's weight through a single front tyre and scrubs it on every turn.

Close-up of a wide turf tyre on an electric golf buggy resting gently on a striped British lawn

Are electric buggies kinder to turf than petrol?

On weight, they're broadly similar once batteries are fitted, and a lithium electric buggy is often lighter than its petrol equivalent. The clear win is chemical. Petrol machines drip fuel and oil, and a single spill scorches fine turf badly enough to leave a dead patch that needs returfing. Electric buggies carry no fuel, no engine oil and no hot exhaust that can singe dry grass in summer. For greens surrounds, formal lawns and event sites, that alone settles the argument.

There's a quieter benefit too. Electric drivetrains deliver torque smoothly from a standstill, so there's no clutch-snatch wheelspin on damp grass, which is a classic cause of scuffed launch marks with petrol buggies. Clubs running mixed fleets notice the difference on their first wet autumn, which is one reason golf clubs moving to electric fleets rarely move back.

The one rule that prevents most turf damage
Decide buggy access daily based on ground conditions, not the calendar. A firm, dry January day is safer for turf than a sodden August one. Greenkeepers who make the call each morning, and enforce path-only or no-buggy days without exception, see a fraction of the repair bills of venues with fixed seasonal rules.

Frequently asked questions

Do golf buggies ruin grass?+

Not when used sensibly. On dry, firm turf a buggy's ground pressure is lower than a walking person's heel. Damage happens in specific conditions: tight turns on wet grass, repeated identical routes, saturated ground and frost. Manage those and buggies leave no lasting mark.

How heavy is a golf buggy per wheel?+

A typical 450kg electric buggy carries roughly 110 to 120kg per wheel unladen, rising to around 160kg per wheel with two adults aboard. Spread over a soft turf tyre's large contact patch, that's gentler on the ground than most foot traffic.

Can you drive a buggy on wet grass?+

On damp grass, yes, with wide turns and varied routes. On saturated, squelching ground, no. Waterlogged soil has almost no bearing strength, so even light vehicles cut ruts that need physical repair. If water pools in your footprints, park the buggy.

What tyres protect lawns best?+

Dedicated turf tyres with a shallow, rounded tread, run at the maker's low recommended pressure, usually 8 to 12 psi. Soft tyres spread the load; overinflated ones concentrate it. Avoid aggressive knobbly treads on fine grass, they're designed to dig.

Do electric buggies damage turf less than petrol ones?+

Weight is similar, but electric buggies drip no fuel or oil (a single petrol spill can kill a patch of fine turf), have no hot exhaust and pull away smoothly without wheelspin. For greens surrounds and formal lawns they're the safer choice.

Don't let turf worry put you off a buggy; just spec and run it properly. Choose a four-wheel electric model, ideally lithium for the lighter build, insist on turf tyres and keep them soft, and make ground-condition calls daily rather than seasonally. Do that and your grass will show less wear from the buggy than from the people walking beside it.

Looking for a turf-friendly electric buggy?

Every Hawke model can be specified with turf tyres and a lightweight lithium pack, backed by a 3-year warranty. Browse the range and see which build suits your ground.

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Written by
Hawke Editorial Team
Guides & buyer's advice, Hawke Electric Vehicles

Our guides are written and reviewed by the Hawke Electric Vehicles team, the people who specify, build, deliver and support the vehicles. We focus on honest, practical advice and flag where a figure depends on the build rather than guessing.

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