How to Reset a Club Car Battery Charger
A Club Car charger that won’t start often just needs a reset or a small voltage bump. Here is the exact sequence, plus why the onboard computer is usually behind it.
Quick answer: To reset a club car battery charger: unplug the charger from both the wall and the cart for a minute, then reconnect. If it still won’t start, the pack voltage is likely below the minimum the OBC requires to begin charging — briefly bump the pack with a separate charger or a known-good battery to raise it above the threshold, then the charger should engage. On OBC-equipped Club Cars, the computer must “see” enough voltage; a deeply discharged pack triggers a no-start that a reset plus a small voltage boost resolves.
01 // Basic Reset Steps to Reset a Club Car Battery Charger
Start simple: unplug the charger from the wall outlet and from the cart, wait about 60 seconds, and plug it back in (cart side first, then wall). This clears a stuck state in many cases. Make sure the outlet works and the cart’s tow/run switch is set to run.
02 // The Minimum Voltage Problem
Club Car chargers (and the OBC) need to detect a minimum pack voltage before they start. If the batteries are deeply discharged, the charger sees too little voltage and refuses to begin — looking “dead” when it is actually a safety behavior. Briefly raising the pack voltage solves it. Our minimum voltage guide covers the exact thresholds.
03 // Bumping the Pack Voltage
- Connect a separate 12V charger to one or two batteries for a few minutes, or briefly jump from a known-good battery.
- Raise the total pack voltage above the charger’s minimum threshold.
- Reconnect the Club Car charger — it should now engage and finish the charge.
04 // When the OBC Is the Culprit
If resets and voltage boosts do not work, the OBC itself may be faulty or incompatible (common after a lithium swap). Many owners install a smart charger and bypass the OBC entirely — see our Club Car OBC bypass guide.
Charger Reset Summary
To reset a club car battery charger: unplug both ends for a minute and reconnect. If it still won’t start, the pack is below the OBC minimum voltage — bump it with a separate charger, then reconnect. Persistent faults point to the OBC.
