Fayette County, Georgia
Peachtree City Golf Cart Map & Rules Guide
Independent map with official source links and local rules notes.
Green lines are OSM cart-tagged paths. Purple dashed lines are candidate/shared-use paths. Candidate paths should be checked against official sources. Routes, access and local rules can change.
Map corrections should be submitted at the source. For local rules, check the official sources below.
Map and town details
Official sources and updates
Use official local sources to confirm current rules, crossings, tunnels and path-system details.
Local golf cart rules
This is an independent summary for general planning. Local laws and access rules can change, so check official sources before relying on any route or rule.
Local golf cart rules summary
Peachtree City has an extensive multi-use path system used by pedestrians, cyclists and permitted motorized carts. This independent page combines OpenStreetMap-derived path data with links to official city sources. Use the official Peachtree City Paths & Motorized Carts page and official multi-use path map to confirm current rules, crossings, tunnels and path-system details before relying on any route.
Town FAQs
Is there a Peachtree City golf cart map?
Yes. Peachtree City provides an official multi-use path system map, and this page also shows an independent OpenStreetMap-based map with cart-tagged and candidate shared-use paths.
What do the green and purple lines mean?
Green lines are paths explicitly tagged for golf-cart use in OpenStreetMap. Purple dashed lines are candidate/shared-use paths that may require checking against official Peachtree City sources.
Are all visible paths official golf cart paths?
No. This is an independent map using public map data. Use the official Peachtree City map and rules page to confirm current access, crossings, tunnels and restrictions.
How accurate is this map?
This page currently has medium map confidence. Some paths are explicitly cart-tagged in OpenStreetMap, while many visible paths are candidate/shared-use paths.
Can I rely on this map for legal route decisions?
No. This guide is for planning and research only. Always check official city sources before relying on a route or rule.
How do I report a missing path or incorrect rule?
The best place to correct map data is OpenStreetMap. Use the “Improve this map on OpenStreetMap” button above, then add a note or edit the map directly if you are confident. For local rules, check the official sources linked on this page.
How Our Golf Cart Maps Work
Golf Cart Towns uses OpenStreetMap data, local research and official local source links to build independent golf cart map guides. OpenStreetMap is a global mapping database edited by volunteers, organisations, public bodies and local mappers.
Our maps distinguish between paths that appear to be explicitly tagged for golf-cart use in OpenStreetMap and candidate/shared-use paths that may need local checking. Candidate paths can look similar to sidewalks or multi-use trails, so they should always be checked against official local maps, posted signs and current rules.
How Path Data Is Checked
We review available OpenStreetMap tags, town map files, official local pages and other source material where available. Some towns have clear official GIS or PDF maps. Others have weaker public data, so the map confidence will be lower.
Because public map data can change, each town page includes official source links, a last-reviewed date and map confidence information. Golf Cart Towns does not directly maintain the underlying OpenStreetMap database.
How You Can Correct or Improve the Map
Spotted a missing path, incorrect route or outdated map detail? The best place to fix it is directly in OpenStreetMap.
That way, the correction can help everyone who uses the shared map data, not just visitors to Golf Cart Towns.
To report an issue, open the town on OpenStreetMap, find the location and use the “Add a Note” tool to drop a pin with a clear description.
If you want to fix it yourself, you can create a free OpenStreetMap account and use the built-in editor. Please use local knowledge, official signs and appropriate OpenStreetMap tagging guidance. If you are not sure whether carts are allowed on a path, it is better to leave a note than to guess.
When our map data is refreshed, approved OpenStreetMap changes may appear in future updates.