Golf Cart Speed Calculator
Calculate your golf cart’s top speed from motor RPM, gear ratio, and tire size — and see exactly how much faster bigger tires make you go.
Quick answer: A golf cart’s top speed is the motor RPM divided by the rear-end gear ratio, multiplied by the tire’s circumference. The formula is MPH = (Motor RPM ÷ Gear Ratio) × (π × Tire Diameter) × 60 ÷ 63,360. Most stock 36V/48V carts land between 12 and 19 mph; taller tires or a lower (numerically smaller) gear ratio raise the top end.
How the golf cart speed calculator works
The axle turns the wheels at motor RPM divided by the gear ratio. Each wheel revolution moves the cart one tire circumference (π × diameter). Convert that distance-per-minute to miles per hour (there are 63,360 inches in a mile and 60 minutes in an hour) and you have your theoretical top speed. Real-world speed runs slightly lower because the motor loses some RPM under load, so treat the result as a ceiling that you will land just below.
Stock gear ratios and what they mean
The rear-end (differential) gear ratio is the lever between torque and speed. Lower numbers mean higher speed and less low-end grunt; higher numbers mean more torque for hills and loads. These are the common stock and aftermarket ratios:
| Gear ratio | Typical use | Effect |
|---|---|---|
| 12.44:1 | Club Car stock | Balanced stock speed/torque |
| 12.34:1 | E-Z-GO stock | Balanced stock speed/torque |
| ~12.5:1 | Yamaha stock | Balanced stock speed/torque |
| 15:1 | Low-end torque set | More hill/hauling power, lower top speed |
| 8:1 | Mild speed set | Higher top speed, softer launch |
| 6:1 | High-speed set | Maximum speed, weakest low end |
Typical motor RPM by setup
If you do not have a spec sheet, these no-load RPM ranges are a reliable starting point for the calculator. Higher voltage and high-speed motor winds raise the figure:
| Motor / setup | Approx. no-load RPM |
|---|---|
| Stock 36V series motor | ~3,000–3,600 |
| Stock 48V series motor | ~3,800–4,400 |
| High-speed performance motor | ~4,800–5,500 |
| High-torque motor | ~3,200–4,000 |
Respect your motor’s safe limits when chasing RPM — over-speeding wears brushes and bearings fast. Our guide on safe motor RPM limits explains how to stay inside them.
How bigger tires change your speed and speedometer
Because speed scales directly with tire diameter, fitting a taller tire is the simplest speed mod there is. The catch is that a factory speedometer still assumes the original tire, so it reads low after an upgrade. Here is the effect of common tire jumps from an 18-inch stock tire:
| Tire diameter | Speed change vs. 18″ | Speedo reads |
|---|---|---|
| 18″ (stock) | baseline | accurate |
| 20″ | +11% | ~10% low |
| 22″ | +22% | ~18% low |
| 23″ | +28% | ~22% low |
The trade-off: taller tires and speed gears reduce torque off the line and on hills, which our tire size vs. torque guide breaks down in detail.
How to make a golf cart faster, safely
- Taller tires: the cheapest mod; 18″ to 23″ adds about 28% top speed.
- High-output controller: raises the current limit and removes conservative speed governing.
- Performance motor: a high-speed wind trades some low-end torque for more RPM.
- More voltage: converting 36V to 48V (or adding lithium) spins the motor faster.
Balance the build: pair a controller upgrade with a motor rated to handle it, and upgrade brakes if you add real speed. If your cart feels slow when it should not, start with our slow cart troubleshooting guide, see the fastest stock carts, and remember more speed means more energy per mile — check the impact with the range calculator or read our full guide on how fast a golf cart goes. Controller makers like Navitas publish speed gains for their kits.
Golf cart speed FAQs
How fast does a stock golf cart go?
Stock 36V carts top out near 12–14 mph, stock 48V carts near 15–19 mph, and gas carts near 18–24 mph depending on the governor. Lifted and upgraded electric carts can reach 25–35 mph.
Do bigger tires really make a golf cart faster?
Yes – top speed rises in direct proportion to tire diameter, so 18″ to 23″ tires add about 28%. The trade-offs are slower acceleration and a speedometer that reads low until it is recalibrated.
What is a good gear ratio for more speed?
Stock is around 12.5:1. An 8:1 set adds moderate speed with a softer launch, while a 6:1 high-speed set maximizes top end at the cost of low-end torque. A 15:1 set goes the other way for hills and hauling.
How accurate is this golf cart speed calculator?
The formula is exact for theoretical no-load speed. Real top speed usually lands 1–2 mph lower because the motor sheds some RPM under load, so the result is a reliable ceiling.
