Karting

Safety plans are designed to avoid incidents involving injury to personnel and property damage during Motorsports events. Many event organizers will have a copy of their plan available electronically via their websites, or at event registration. The guidelines below are designed to capture "general event safety" for the respective discipline. Use this information as a foundation for a proactive program of safety awareness and site safety supervision. Although specific personnel are assigned duties involving the enforcement of safety requirements, REMEMBER: safety is the responsibility of every event official, participant, and non-participant attending the events.

Go-karts (or “Karts”) are exceptionally fun and safe to drive. The vast majority of Go-karts are made from exceptionally robust frame materials. Go-kart power plants and drive-trains vary in design, from multiple types of internal combustion engines, to fully electric. Some are known as “side-winders” where the motor sits beside the driver while others have rear mounted engines. In either case, almost all Go-karts are rear-wheel drive. If driven correctly its highly unlikely that a Go-Kart will flip over. Keeping their low center of gravity in mind, it means they are also very easy to handle, and are incredibly easy to learn how to drive from a young age. This makes them ideal for children (and adults) wanting to learn racecraft before progressing onto other Motorsports disciplines. 

In this episode of Break/Fix Podcast safety related topics like: Safety in Karting, Changes to Kart Safety over the years, Karting Safety Gear and more are covered. Special thanks to RaceFactory USA for contributing this information.


The data and recommendations presented by this safety plan provide a foundation from which the event organizers and safety stewards will implement a functional program of incident avoidance. This plan is not all inclusive and additional safety supporting procedures may be developed and implemented during the event. Where safety is concerned, there is no excuse for knowing something to be wrong, or risk generating, and ignoring the situation because it is not spelled out in writing somewhere. Safety is not a game of semantics or rule bending. It must be a living program balancing the needs of a highly competitive Motorsport, with the realities of safety and risk reduction.