Half the people searching for an electric golf buggy in the UK actually want a golf trolley, and half the people pricing trolleys really need a buggy, because the two names blur constantly. The difference is simple once said plainly: a golf buggy is a ride-on vehicle that carries you, your playing partner and your bags around the course, while a golf trolley is a wheeled carrier, push-along or motorised, that carries your bag while you walk. This guide sets out the difference honestly, including which one you actually need, whichever that turns out to be.
- A buggy is a ride-on vehicle: it carries people, two to eight of them, plus bags.
- A trolley carries only your bag, powered or pushed, while you walk the course.
- Trolleys cost hundreds; ride-on buggies are a vehicle purchase in the thousands.
- Walking golfers want a trolley; clubs, venues and those who cannot walk 18 holes want buggies.
- The word cart confuses things further: in the US it means the ride-on buggy.
What each one is
A golf trolley is golf luggage on wheels: a frame that holds your bag, either pushed by hand or driven by a small motor with you walking beside it. It keeps the weight off your shoulders and the walk in your round. A golf buggy is a vehicle: seats, a steering wheel, a motor that carries you, and typically your partner and both bags, around the course and beyond it, the machine our whole buyers guide is about. They solve different problems, which is why the price difference is a whole order of magnitude.
Which do you actually need?
If you enjoy the walk and just want the bag carried, you want a trolley, and we will say so plainly even though we do not sell them: a good powered trolley is the right buy for a fit walking golfer. You want a buggy when riding is the point: you cannot or should not walk 18 holes, you are a club or resort moving members and guests, you run a venue where the vehicle works beyond the course, or you simply prefer to ride. Sizing that choice is our what-size guide; and note a buggy also works off the course, around estates and sites, in a way no trolley can.
And where does the cart fit in?
One more knot to untie: Americans call the ride-on buggy a golf cart, and some UK golfers use cart for a push trolley, which is how shoppers end up on the wrong products entirely. In this house style, buggy means the ride-on vehicle, trolley means the bag carrier, and cart is simply the American word for buggy, a naming tangle our buggy versus cart guide unpicks in full. When searching or buying, the seat is the test: if you sit in it, it is a buggy.
Frequently asked questions
What is the difference between a golf buggy and a golf trolley?+
A buggy is a ride-on vehicle that carries you and your bags around the course; a trolley is a wheeled carrier, pushed or motorised, that carries only your bag while you walk. If you sit in it, it is a buggy.
Which is better, a buggy or a trolley?+
Neither; they serve different golfers. A fit walking golfer who wants the bag carried should buy a trolley. Riders, clubs, resorts and anyone who cannot walk 18 holes need a buggy. We sell buggies, and will still tell you honestly if a trolley is your answer.
How much more does a buggy cost than a trolley?+
A powered trolley is a purchase in the hundreds; a ride-on buggy is a vehicle purchase in the thousands, because it is a vehicle: seats, drivetrain, battery and years of working life. Our cost guides set out what drives a buggy's price.
Is a golf cart a buggy or a trolley?+
In America, cart means the ride-on buggy. Some UK golfers confusingly use it for push trolleys too. If it has a seat, it is the ride-on vehicle whatever it is called.
Can a trolley do anything a buggy does off the course?+
No. A trolley only carries a golf bag. A buggy is a working vehicle that also serves estates, venues and sites beyond golf, which is why many of our buyers are not golfers at all.
Sure it is a buggy you need?
Tell us how you will use it, on the course or beyond it, and we will confirm the right vehicle honestly and cost it honestly.
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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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