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How to Hurricane-Proof Your Golf Cart: A Tampa Bay Owner's Guide

How to Hurricane-Proof Your Golf Cart: A Tampa Bay Owner's Guide

How to Hurricane-Proof Your Golf Cart: A Tampa Bay Owner's Guide

Posted on May 9th, 2026

If you live in Tampa Bay, you already know the drill. The water gets bathtub-warm, the afternoon sky turns a strange shade of green-gray, and somewhere on the news a meteorologist is pointing at a swirl off the coast of Africa.

Hurricane season runs June 1 through November 30, and that's a long stretch of weather to stay ready for. If your golf cart lives in your driveway, in an open carport, or even in a screened lanai, it's time to think about what happens when a storm has its eye on the bay.

The good news? A little prep goes a long way. Most cart damage during a storm isn't from the wind itself—it's from things blowing into the cart, water sitting where it shouldn't, and electrical issues nobody saw coming. Here's how to get your ride ready before the cones start showing up on the forecast.

Start With Where Your Cart Lives

Storage is the single biggest factor in how your cart rides out a storm. If you can park it in a garage, do it. That's the gold standard.

If a garage isn't an option, look for an interior space with solid walls and a real roof—a workshop, a pole barn, even a covered driveway tucked tight against the house. The goal is to keep the cart out of straight-line winds and away from anything that could become a projectile.

Open carports and lanais are the riskiest spots. Screen enclosures are not hurricane protection. Screens shred, the frame can collapse, and suddenly your cart is sitting outside with bonus debris on top of it.

If outside is your only choice:

  • Park it as close to the house as possible, ideally on the lee side (the side away from where the wind is hitting).
  • Move it away from trees, light poles, fences, and pool cages.
  • Avoid low spots in the yard where water tends to pool.

Lock Down Anything That Can Move

Once you've picked your spot, walk around the cart and remove or secure everything that isn't bolted down. Wind doesn't have to be 100 mph to fling a flag, a cooler, or a steering wheel cover into your neighbor's window.

Things to take inside:

  • Cart cover (a flapping cover becomes a sail)
  • Removable tops or rear-seat cushions, if applicable
  • Ball washers, coolers, cargo boxes, and rear baskets
  • Flags, antennas, and any clip-on accessories
  • Mirrors that fold or pop off easily
  • Anything sitting on the dashboard or in the cup holders

For your windshield, fold it down if you have a folding-style glass or acrylic shield. A flat windshield catches a lot less wind than an upright one.

Protect Your Battery (Especially Lithium)

Your battery is the most expensive component on your cart. Treat it like one.

Charge it fully before the storm. Power outages are common, and you may not be able to charge for several days afterward. A full battery also gives you a working cart in case you need to check on a neighbor or move around the property after the storm.

Once it's fully charged, unplug the charger and disconnect it from the wall. Lightning surges during storms can travel through chargers and fry your battery management system. If your cart has a main disconnect switch or key, switch it off too. This protects sensitive electronics from any stray voltage.

If you have a lithium battery, you've got an advantage—lithium handles temperature swings better than lead-acid and won't sulfate from sitting unused for a few days. Just keep it dry and disconnected during the storm.

Waterproof What You Can

Tampa Bay storms bring rain that comes sideways. Even a "covered" cart can end up soaked.

A few smart moves:

  • Roll up or remove fabric or vinyl enclosures—they trap water against the cart instead of shedding it.
  • Cover the steering column and dash with a heavy-duty trash bag if the cart is exposed.
  • Tape over the charge port with painter's tape (it peels off clean and keeps blowing rain out of the receptacle).
  • Make sure drain plugs in the floorboard are clear so any water that does get in can drain out.

If your cart sits low and you're in a flood-prone area, consider parking it on higher ground—even a couple of inches of elevation matters when storm surge is in the forecast.

After the Storm: Don't Just Hop In

Once the wind dies down, resist the urge to fire it up right away. Walk around the cart first.

Check for:

  • Standing water in the floorboard, under the seats, or near the controller and battery
  • Debris lodged under the cart, around the wheels, or in the suspension
  • Visible damage to wiring, connectors, or the battery compartment
  • Tire pressure, since flying debris can cause slow leaks

If anything got wet that shouldn't have—especially the controller, batteries, or solenoid—do not turn the key. Let the cart dry fully (a fan in the garage helps) and have it inspected by a qualified tech before powering it back up. Saltwater contact is even more serious; that needs professional attention right away to prevent long-term corrosion.

A Few Tampa-Specific Reminders

  • Sign up for AlertTampa or your county's emergency notifications. Storm tracks change fast.
  • Know your evacuation zone. If you're in Zone A or B and an evacuation is called, your cart probably can't come with you—prep it to ride out the storm in place.
  • If you're in a golf cart community (think Sun City Center, Kings Point, certain South Tampa neighborhoods), check your HOA's storm protocols. Some communities require carts to be moved off common pathways before a storm.
  • Keep your registration, insurance info, and serial number photos somewhere safe—a cloud folder or your phone—in case you need to file a claim.

Need Help Getting Storm-Ready?

If your cart is due for a checkup, a battery test, or a tire rotation before hurricane season hits full swing, now is the time to bring it in—not the day before a storm warning, when every shop in the bay is slammed.

Stop by Golf Cart Superstore in Tampa or Largo and our team will get your cart inspected, charged up, and ready for whatever the season throws at us.

Stay safe out there, Tampa Bay—and enjoy the calm days while we've got 'em. 🌴

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