Several Kansas towns allow golf carts on public streets, but each has its own rules. Here are the key ones with active ordinances:Wichita — Allowed on streets 30 mph or less and, since July 2026, on sidewalks and multi-use paths too. You need to be 16 or older with a valid driver's license, carry liability insurance, and follow daytime rules unless properly lit.Olathe — Permitted on streets posted at 30 mph or below. Requires a valid driver's license, liability insurance, and proper lighting plus a slow-moving vehicle emblem for nighttime use.Lenexa — Allowed only on roads 25 mph or less. Must have headlights, taillights, and brake lights; valid driver's license required. No sidewalks or trails.Shawnee — Similar to Lenexa — roads 25 mph or less, licensed driver, insurance, and lights for after dark.Spring Hill — Recently updated to allow on designated streets up to 30 mph. Drivers must be 16+ with a valid license and carry insurance. Stay to the right side of the road.Andover — Allowed on streets 30 mph or less. Daytime only unless equipped, needs mirrors, and must be registered with police.Smaller towns like Garnett, Derby, Liberal, and Sedgwick also have local permitting systems — usually a yearly fee of $10–$75, a decal, driver's license, and insurance proof.Rules keep evolving locally, especially around lighting and sidewalks. If you're targeting a specific town for this info project, tell me which one and I can narrow in deeper.
In Kansas, golf carts on public streets are controlled locally, not by the state. State law (K.S.A. 8-15,108, updated in 2009 and 2018) bans them from interstate, federal, or state highways and any street over 30 mph. They can only run on city streets if the city passes an ordinance allowing it — otherwise, they're illegal on public roads. Most cities that allow them require a valid driver's license (so age 16+), proof of liability insurance, and often a local permit or decal you register with the city each year — like Scott City charges $25 a year, Cherryvale $30. Operation is usually sunrise to sunset unless the cart has proper lights and a slow-moving vehicle emblem.Over time, it's been steady: cities decide case-by-case, some added rules around 2018-2021, and a few updated recently for night use or sidewalk operation. It's not a statewide system — it's patchwork, city by city.Pros: Cheaper and easier than cars for short trips in neighborhoods, less traffic congestion, fun and eco-friendly for local use, and cities can tailor rules to their streets.Cons: Safety risks on mixed traffic — they're open, slow, and less visible. Insurance and permitting add hassle and cost. Rules vary so much between towns that it's confusing, and enforcement can be spotty.
Here's the quick rundown on Kansas's top 10 cities for golf carts on public streets:
- Wichita: Recently approved — allowed on streets 30 mph or less, plus sidewalks as of July 2026. Needs driver's license, insurance, proper lights, and slow-moving vehicle emblem.
- Overland Park: Not allowed on public streets.
- Kansas City, KS: Not allowed — follows strict state limits with no local ordinance permitting them.
- Olathe: Allowed on streets 30 mph or less, daytime only unless equipped with lights and slow-moving emblem. Requires valid driver's license and liability insurance.
- Topeka: Not allowed.
- Lawrence: Follows the standard state prohibition — no local allowance.
- Shawnee: Allowed on roads 25 mph or less since around 2021. Licensed driver, insurance, and lights for night use required.
- Lenexa: Allowed on roads 25 mph or less. Needs headlights, taillights, brake lights, and a valid driver's license.
- Manhattan: Not allowed.
- Salina: Not allowed.
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