Quick answer: Most modern golf carts use a 48V system, which delivers a strong balance of range, speed, torque, and battery cost for residential, golf-course, and HOA-community driving. 36V systems are the legacy standard found on older E-Z-GO TXTs and pre-2008 Club Cars and are best left on stock-purpose golfing carts. 72V systems are an enthusiast and high-performance choice for lifted carts, hilly terrain, six-passenger vehicles, and street-legal LSV builds that need extra power and range.
If you own a golf cart in Canyon Lake, Temecula, Murrieta, Lake Elsinore, Menifee, or anywhere across Riverside County, the system voltage on the data plate is one of the most important specs you'll ever look at. It dictates which batteries you can run, which controllers and motors are compatible, how steep a hill you can climb, how far you can drive, and how much it costs to upgrade. As an Authorized E-Z-GO Dealer with 670+ five-star Google reviews and a mobile service truck that visits dozens of carts a week, we spend more time answering voltage questions than almost any other technical question.
This guide breaks down 36V vs 48V vs 72V in plain English, with real numbers, real costs, and a clear recommendation for each use case.
What does golf cart voltage actually mean?
Golf cart system voltage is the total nominal voltage of the battery pack that powers the drive motor. It is the sum of the individual battery voltages wired in series. A 36V cart typically runs six 6-volt batteries (6 × 6 = 36V). A 48V cart can run six 8-volt batteries, eight 6-volt batteries, four 12-volt batteries, or a single 48V lithium pack. A 72V cart usually runs six 12-volt batteries, twelve 6-volt batteries, or a 72V lithium pack.
Higher voltage at the same amperage produces more wattage — and watts are what move the cart. Roughly speaking, a 48V system delivers about 33% more power than a 36V system at the same current draw, and a 72V system delivers double the power of a 36V system. That extra wattage is what gives higher-voltage carts their better hill climbing, faster acceleration, and longer range under load.
Voltage is not the same thing as battery capacity, which is measured in amp-hours (Ah) or kilowatt-hours (kWh). Two carts can run the same voltage and have very different ranges depending on the Ah rating of the pack. Voltage controls how hard the cart pulls; capacity controls how far it can pull.
36V golf carts: who they're for
Best for: stock golfing carts, flat HOA neighborhoods, light recreational use, and budget-conscious owners who already have a 36V cart and don't need to upgrade.
36V systems were the dominant voltage on E-Z-GO TXTs and Marathons for decades, and on Club Car DS models built before 2008. They use a series-wound DC motor, a basic resistor-coil or solid-state controller, and most often a six-pack of 6-volt flooded lead-acid batteries like Trojan T-105s. A healthy 36V cart with fresh batteries will reach roughly 12–14 mph stock and travel 25–35 miles on a charge in mild conditions.
The strengths of 36V are simplicity and parts availability. Batteries are inexpensive, controllers are cheap to replace, and most independent shops can service a 36V system without specialty tools. The weakness is performance: a 36V cart struggles on the long uphill grades you find around Canyon Lake, the Temecula wine country foothills, and the Coachella Valley mesa neighborhoods. Add a lift kit and 22-inch tires and a 36V cart will feel slow and overheat its motor on extended climbs.
Across our shop's service records, 36V carts past 12 years old often need a controller, motor, or solenoid replacement before they're worth a battery investment. We'll usually recommend either a full 48V conversion or a replacement cart at that point, since the parts cost is similar either way.
48V golf carts: the modern default
Best for: almost everyone — daily HOA drivers, families with kids and dogs, four- and six-passenger carts, mild lift kits, and anyone considering a lithium upgrade.
48V is the standard on every new E-Z-GO Liberty, Express L6, Valor, and modern RXV/TXT, on every new Club Car Onward and Tempo, and on every new Yamaha Drive2 PTV. It is also the standard on imports including ICON, Kandi, Bintelli, and Evolution. If you're buying a cart in 2026, you are almost certainly buying a 48V cart.
The reason 48V won the market is that it delivers roughly 2× the torque of a 36V system at the same amperage and runs cooler under sustained load, while still being affordable to battery and service. A typical 48V lead-acid cart will reach 15–19 mph stock with 30–40 miles of range. A 48V cart with a factory or aftermarket lithium pack — for example, the E-Z-GO ELiTE Lithium 1.0 with Samsung 56Ah cells, a RELiON RB48V200, or an Eco Battery 48V 105Ah — will reach 19–25 mph (depending on the speed code and gear ratio) with 40–60 miles of range and dramatically faster recharge.
The 48V platform is also where the modern aftermarket lives. AC drive controllers from Curtis, Navitas TSX600A and TSX440A, Plum Quick speed codes, regen-braking systems, and DOT lighting kits are all built around 48V architecture. If you want to add street-legal LSV equipment, lift kits with 22-inch all-terrain tires, or a rear-facing seat kit, 48V is the platform that supports it cleanly.
72V golf carts: when the extra voltage actually pays off
Best for: heavy six-passenger carts, lifted carts on 23-inch+ tires, steep terrain, off-road trail use, LSV builds, and enthusiasts who want truck-like torque from a cart-sized vehicle.
72V is uncommon at the dealer level — there is no factory 72V offering from E-Z-GO, Club Car, or Yamaha — but it's a popular aftermarket conversion for owners who want serious performance. A 72V conversion typically pairs a Navitas TSX600A or TSX440A AC controller with an AC induction motor (or a DC controller paired with a high-torque series-wound motor) and a 72V lithium pack from RELiON, Allied, Eco Battery, or a custom builder.
The upside of 72V is real: top speeds of 28–35 mph (geared appropriately and within local LSV laws), substantial torque for towing utility trailers or pulling lifted six-passenger carts up grades, and very long range when paired with a high-Ah lithium pack. A 72V system also handles accessory loads like LED light bars, stereo systems, refrigerators, and DC-DC accessories without sagging the main pack.
The downsides are cost and complexity. A complete 72V conversion of an existing 48V cart typically runs $5,500–$9,500 in parts and labor, depending on motor selection, controller, lithium pack size, and rewiring. Insurance, registration as an LSV (if applicable), and HOA approval can also become factors above 25 mph. We typically recommend 72V only when an owner has a clear use case that 48V cannot satisfy — for example, a heavy six-passenger cart that regularly climbs the long Canyon Lake hills with a full load.
36V vs 48V vs 72V: side-by-side comparison
Here is how the three system voltages compare on the specs that matter most to owners:
| Spec | 36V | 48V | 72V |
|---|---|---|---|
| Typical top speed (stock) | 12–14 mph | 15–19 mph (lead) / 19–25 mph (lithium) | 25–35 mph |
| Typical range (lead-acid) | 25–35 mi | 30–40 mi | 35–50 mi |
| Typical range (lithium) | 30–40 mi | 40–60 mi | 60–90 mi |
| Hill-climbing torque | Modest | Strong | Excellent |
| Best motor pairing | DC series-wound | DC series or AC induction | AC induction or high-torque DC |
| Battery options | 6× 6V flooded lead | 6× 8V, 4× 12V, or 48V lithium | 6× 12V or 72V lithium |
| Replacement battery cost (lead-acid) | $700–$1,100 | $1,000–$1,500 | $1,400–$2,200 |
| Replacement battery cost (lithium) | $2,400–$3,800 | $2,800–$4,800 | $4,200–$7,500 |
| Charger cost (replacement) | $280–$420 | $320–$650 | $650–$1,200 |
| Aftermarket support | Shrinking | Strongest in the industry | Specialty / enthusiast |
| Best for | Stock golfing carts | Almost everyone | Heavy / lifted / LSV builds |
The takeaway: 48V is the safest answer for almost any 2026 buyer, 36V is acceptable if you already own one and the cart is in good shape, and 72V earns its keep only if you have a specific high-performance use case.
How voltage affects your battery options
Voltage is the first thing that determines what batteries you can buy. A 36V cart is locked into either a six-pack of 6-volt flooded lead-acid (Trojan T-105, US Battery US 2200, Crown 6V) or a 36V drop-in lithium pack from RELiON, Eco Battery, or Allied. A 48V cart has by far the widest selection: six 8-volt T-875s, eight 6-volt T-105s, four 12-volt deep-cycle, or any 48V lithium pack from a half-dozen brands. A 72V cart usually runs six 12-volt batteries (lead) or a 72V lithium pack.
Lithium upgrades behave differently at each voltage. On a 36V cart, a lithium upgrade returns useful range improvements but doesn't unlock much extra speed because the motor and controller are voltage-limited. On a 48V cart, lithium is transformative — faster recharge, 40–60 mile range, and (with the right speed code) a real top-speed bump. On a 72V cart, lithium is essentially mandatory for the conversion to make economic sense, since lead-acid at 72V is heavy, short-lived, and slow to recharge.
In Canyon Lake, Temecula, and the rest of Inland Empire and Coachella Valley, summer heat shortens flooded lead-acid life by 1–2 years compared to coastal climates. We often recommend lithium on 48V carts driven 4+ days a week in the heat for that reason alone — the cycle-life math works out faster than most owners expect.
How voltage affects motors and controllers
Motors and controllers must match the system voltage. A 36V controller cannot run a 48V system without damage, and a 48V series-wound motor will burn up if fed 72V for any length of time. When we quote a voltage upgrade, the parts list almost always includes a new motor, a new controller, a new charger, a new solenoid, a new battery pack, new heavy-gauge cables, and often a new wiring harness — because each of these components has voltage limits.
The most common motor types you'll encounter:
- DC series-wound: the classic golf cart motor. Cheap, strong off-the-line torque, no regenerative braking, top speed limited by gearing. Runs on 36V or 48V.
- DC shunt-wound (regen): used on some 48V Club Car DS and Precedent platforms. Adds regenerative braking but requires specific controllers (Curtis 1510, GE shunt, etc.).
- AC induction: the modern standard on E-Z-GO RXV and Liberty, Club Car Onward, and most premium 48V/72V conversions. Smooth, quiet, regen-equipped, and far more efficient than DC. Controllers include Curtis 1239 and Navitas TSX series.
If you're buying a used cart, always check the motor and controller against the badged voltage before buying lithium or planning an upgrade.
Can I convert my golf cart from 36V to 48V or 72V?
Yes, but the math has to make sense. A 36V to 48V conversion is the most common upgrade we perform. It includes a new 48V motor (or a rewind of the existing one), a new 48V controller, a new 48V charger, new batteries, and minor wiring changes. Done with quality parts, the conversion delivers 48V-class speed and range and typically runs $2,400–$3,800 with lead-acid, or $4,800–$7,200 with lithium.
A 48V to 72V conversion is more involved. It usually requires an AC drivetrain swap (motor + controller as a kit), a new high-output charger, a 72V lithium pack, a new BMS-aware accessory bus, and reinforced cabling. We quote 48V to 72V conversions in the $5,500–$9,500 range depending on the platform and the parts brand selected.
Before any voltage conversion, we recommend an honest assessment of the cart. If the frame is rusty, the steering rack is sloppy, the body has cracks, or the cart is over 12 years old with high hours, the conversion money is usually better spent on a newer-platform cart that already runs the voltage you want from the factory.
Frequently asked questions
Is a 48V golf cart faster than a 36V?
Yes. A stock 48V golf cart typically tops out at 15–19 mph compared to 12–14 mph for a 36V cart, and a 48V cart with a lithium pack and modern controller can reach 19–25 mph. The 48V system also delivers roughly twice the torque of a 36V at the same current, so hill climbing and acceleration are noticeably stronger.
How long do golf cart batteries last on each voltage?
Battery lifespan depends on chemistry and use, not voltage. Flooded lead-acid batteries (any voltage) last 4–6 years with proper monthly watering and weekly charging. Lithium packs last 8–12 years and 2,000–4,000 cycles. In Southern California's heat, expect lead-acid life to shorten by 1–2 years compared to coastal climates.
Can I put 48V batteries in a 36V cart?
No, not without converting the entire system. The motor, controller, charger, solenoid, and wiring on a 36V cart are all built for 36V and will fail (often immediately) if fed 48V. A proper conversion replaces every voltage-sensitive component at once. Attempting to "just add a battery" to a 36V cart is one of the most common DIY mistakes we are called to repair.
Do 72V golf carts need special insurance or registration?
The voltage itself doesn't trigger anything, but the speed often does. In California, any cart capable of more than 25 mph must be registered as an LSV (Low-Speed Vehicle) with the DMV, carry insurance, and have DOT-compliant safety equipment (turn signals, mirrors, seat belts, VIN). Most 72V conversions exceed 25 mph and need to be set up as LSVs to be street-legal.
What's the best voltage for HOA driving in Canyon Lake or Sun City?
48V is the right answer for almost every HOA community in Riverside County. It has enough power for the rolling terrain, accepts every modern accessory and lithium upgrade, and stays within the speed limits posted in most communities (typically 15–25 mph). 36V is acceptable on flat HOA streets if you already own a healthy cart; 72V is generally overkill and may exceed posted HOA speed rules.
Will a higher voltage cart climb hills better?
Yes, all else being equal. Hill climbing is a torque-and-watts problem, and watts are voltage × amperage. A 48V system at the same controller current produces 33% more wattage than a 36V system; a 72V system produces 100% more. Owners in hilly neighborhoods like parts of Canyon Lake, Temecula wine country, and the Palm Desert mesa communities are the most common candidates for 72V conversions for exactly this reason.
How can I tell what voltage my cart is?
Check the data plate (usually under the seat or on the dash), count the batteries and multiply by their individual voltage (six 6V = 36V; six 8V or eight 6V or four 12V = 48V; six 12V = 72V), or check the charger output sticker. If you're still not sure, our mobile technicians can identify it on a free phone call.
Which voltage is right for you?
If you already own a healthy 36V cart and use it for stock-purpose driving, keep it. It's not worth converting unless the motor, controller, or batteries all need replacement at once. If you're buying new or replacing a worn-out cart, 48V is the right answer for the overwhelming majority of Southern California owners — it has the strongest aftermarket support, the widest battery options, the most upgrade paths, and the best long-term resale. If you have a specific high-performance need — a lifted six-passenger cart, hilly terrain, an LSV street-legal build, or a daily towing job — 72V is worth the conversion cost. Otherwise, save the money.
If you'd like a no-pressure recommendation for your specific cart and use case, our mobile technicians can come to you anywhere in Canyon Lake, Temecula, Murrieta, Lake Elsinore, Menifee, or the broader Riverside County and Coachella Valley service areas. Book a service or upgrade consultation at our online booking page, or browse new E-Z-GO inventory if you're starting from scratch.
For deeper reading, see our related guides on the best lithium golf cart batteries of 2026, how far a golf cart can go on a charge, and how long a golf cart actually lasts.
About the author: This article was written by the Canyon Lake Mobile Golf Cart Repair team — an Authorized E-Z-GO Dealer and mobile service provider with 670+ five-star Google reviews across Canyon Lake, Temecula, Murrieta, Lake Elsinore, Menifee, and Riverside County. Call (951) 580-9822 or email service@canyonlakemobile.com.
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