A glamping site or campsite is spread out on purpose: the space and the quiet are the product. But that same spread makes moving guests, their luggage and your supplies hard work, especially from check-in to a distant pitch or safari tent. An electric cart solves it without spoiling the very calm guests came for: it carries people and bags quietly and cleanly across the site, and it doubles as the workhorse that keeps pitches stocked and serviced. This guide covers how operators use them.
- Carry guests and their luggage from check-in to the pitch in one quiet trip.
- Move supplies, firewood, linen and waste around the site through the day.
- Near-silent, fume-free running protects the calm guests are paying for.
- One vehicle serves guest transport and site work; a small fleet for busy sites.
- Hire for a first season, buy once it earns its keep.
From check-in to the pitch
The arrival sets the tone, and a long trudge to a far pitch with heavy bags undoes it. A cart with a load area carries the guests and their luggage together, so a welcome feels like a welcome, the same thinking as our luggage transport and guest and visitor transport work. On departure it does the reverse, keeping busy changeover days moving.
The site workhorse
Between arrivals, the same cart earns its keep on site work: firewood and supplies to the pitches, linen and hampers for changeovers, waste and recycling collected, and the grounds kept. Being electric, it does all of this without the engine noise and fumes that would carry across a quiet site and spoil the atmosphere, which our guide on quiet electric vehicles explores.
Sizing and buying or hiring
We size the vehicle, or a small fleet, to your site and your busiest changeover day, so guest transport and site work never compete. Weather protection matters for a British site, so a canopy and screen keep it running through a wet weekend. If you are testing the idea for a first season, hire may suit before you buy, as our hire versus buying guide sets out; once it earns its keep, owning and branding it usually wins.
Frequently asked questions
Why use an electric cart at a glamping site?+
Because it moves guests, luggage and supplies across a spread-out site without the engine noise and fumes that would spoil the calm guests are paying for. It handles both guest transport and site work, quietly and cheaply.
Can it carry guests and their luggage together?+
Yes. A cart with a load area carries the guests and their bags in one trip from check-in to the pitch, so arrivals and departures feel effortless.
Is it useful between guests?+
Very. The same vehicle moves firewood, supplies, linen and waste around the site and helps keep the grounds, so it earns its keep all day, not just at changeover.
Will it run in bad weather?+
With the right specification, yes. A canopy, screen and weather protection keep it working through a wet British weekend, which is when guests need it most.
Should I hire or buy?+
For a first season or to test the idea, hire can suit. Once the cart earns its keep across the season, owning and branding it to your site usually makes more sense. We will advise honestly.
Specify a cart for your site
Tell us your site, your pitches and your busiest changeover, and we will specify the right cart or fleet and prepare a fair quote.

Ready to find the right golf cart?
Tell us how and where it will work and we will specify a vehicle and a tailored quote built around you. Every build comes with a 3-year warranty and a 24-hour priority call-out.
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.
More guides by Hawke





