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Golf Carts & Scooters in Yucatán Beach Towns (2026 Guide)

Thinking about a golf cart or scooter for beach-town life in the Yucatán? Here is what to buy, rent, or maintain in 2026, with real USD costs, legal notes, and safety tips.

2026-07-11

In the Yucatán’s beach towns, the golf cart and the scooter are practically a way of life. In places like Puerto Progreso, Chelem, Chuburná, Telchac, Sisal, and up and down the Costa Esmeralda, you will see far more carts and mototaxis puttering along the sandy streets than full-size cars. For expats settling on the coast, a cart or scooter is often the perfect vehicle: cheap to buy, cheaper to run, easy to park, and ideally suited to short hops to the beach, the market, or a friend’s place. This guide covers everything you need to decide, buy, and ride smart in 2026.

Why a Cart or Scooter Makes Sense Here

Yucatán beach towns are small, flat, slow, and often have narrow or sandy streets. A car can feel like overkill:

  • Short distances. Most daily errands are a few minutes away.
  • Easy parking. Carts and scooters tuck in anywhere.
  • Low cost. Purchase, fuel or charging, and maintenance are all cheap.
  • The lifestyle fits. Open-air, breezy, unhurried, exactly what coastal living is about.

Many expats keep a full-size car for highway trips to Mérida (about 30 to 40 minutes from the Progreso corridor) and use a cart or scooter for everything local.

Golf Carts: Gas vs. Electric

The first decision is your power source.

Electric carts are quiet, clean, and cheap to run, but depend on batteries that need replacement every few years and require you to manage charging, which matters if your power is unreliable. Modern lithium-battery carts have longer range and life than the old lead-acid models but cost more upfront.

Gas carts offer more range and power (helpful for sand and small hills), refuel instantly, and do not worry about battery degradation, at the cost of noise, fumes, and slightly higher running cost.

For flat beach towns with decent grid power, electric is the popular expat choice. If you deal with soft sand, frequent outages, or want to haul loads, gas has its merits.

Golf Cart Option Typical Cost (USD)
Used electric cart (lead-acid) $2,000 – $4,000
Used gas cart $2,500 – $4,500
New electric cart (lithium) $5,500 – $9,000+
New gas cart $6,000 – $9,000+
Replacement lead-acid battery set $600 – $1,200
Replacement lithium battery $1,500 – $3,000

Scooters and Motorcycles

A scooter (100cc to 150cc) is the cheapest motorized option and gets around town effortlessly. Chinese-brand scooters (Italika is the dominant Mexican brand, along with Vento and others) are inexpensive, easy to service, and have parts available everywhere.

Scooter/Moto Option Typical Cost (USD)
Used scooter (100–150cc) $500 – $1,200
New basic scooter (Italika class) $1,000 – $1,800
New mid-range 150cc $1,800 – $2,800
Fuel (fill-up) $4 – $8
Routine service / oil change $10 – $25
Set of tires $50 – $120

Scooters sip fuel (easily 30+ km per liter), so monthly fuel for local riding often runs under $20.

Renting Before You Buy

If you are new to the coast or only around part of the year, renting is smart. Rental availability is strong in tourist-oriented towns.

Rental Typical Cost (USD)
Golf cart (per day) $35 – $70
Golf cart (per week) $150 – $350
Scooter (per day) $20 – $40
Scooter (per week) $90 – $180

Renting for a season is a good way to learn what you actually need before committing to a purchase.

This is the part people gloss over, and it matters.

  • Golf carts occupy a legal gray zone. In most Yucatán beach towns, local carts run informally and are tolerated on town streets, but they are generally not street-legal on highways or for use in Mérida. Do not plan to drive a cart on the road to the city. Rules vary by municipality and do change, so ask locally about current enforcement.
  • Scooters and motorcycles must be registered, plated, and insured like any motor vehicle, and you need a valid license. Do this properly; unregistered bikes get stopped.
  • Insurance: Scooters and motos should carry Mexican liability insurance (cheap, roughly $80 to $200/year). For golf carts, coverage options are limited but some insurers offer policies, and homeowner’s or a specialty policy may cover theft or damage. Ask your insurance agent.
  • Helmets are legally required on scooters and motorcycles, and they save lives. Wear one, and put your passengers in one too.
  • Ride defensively. Sand, loose dogs, potholes, and drivers unaccustomed to sharing the road are the real hazards. Most incidents are low-speed but road rash and broken bones are common on scooters. Go slow, especially on sand.
  • Theft: Carts and scooters are targets. Use a good lock, remove the key, and store them behind your gate at night.

Maintenance and Living With One

  • Salt air is the enemy. Coastal humidity and salt corrode everything metal. Rinse your cart or scooter with fresh water regularly, keep terminals and chains clean and greased, and store under cover. This single habit dramatically extends the life of your vehicle here.
  • Local mechanics for scooters are everywhere and cheap. Golf cart specialists exist in the bigger beach towns and in Mérida; electric-cart battery service is the main thing to line up.
  • Charging (electric): A standard home outlet charges most carts overnight. Factor battery replacement into your long-term budget, as it is the single biggest recurring cost of an electric cart.
  • Spare parts: For scooters, common Mexican brands mean parts are trivial to find. For imported golf carts, source parts before you need them.

Which One Is Right for You?

  • Golf cart if you want open-air comfort, will carry passengers, groceries, or a beach cooler, and mostly stay within town. It is the quintessential beach-town vehicle.
  • Scooter if you are on a budget, ride solo or two-up, want the lowest running cost, and are comfortable being fully street-legal for occasional short road trips.
  • Both, plus a car is a common setup for full-time coastal expats: a cart for daily beach life and a car for Mérida runs.

The Bottom Line

For life in the Yucatán’s beach towns, a golf cart or scooter is often the ideal everyday vehicle: affordable to buy, cheap to run, and perfectly suited to flat, slow, sandy streets. Electric carts win for quiet, clean town use; gas carts and scooters offer more range and simplicity. Rent for a season before buying, register and insure scooters properly, respect the legal gray area around carts on highways, always wear a helmet, and fight the salt air with regular fresh-water rinses. Do that, and you will have a fun, practical ride that fits coastal living perfectly.

If you are considering a move to Progreso, Chelem, Telchac, Sisal, or another Yucatán beach town and want help finding the right home and understanding daily life on the coast, the Mexico Living team is here for you. Give us a call or reach out on WhatsApp for personalized guidance.

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