ARTICLE

Axglo E5 Review

Chris Lang

Read Time: 30 minutes

Axglo E5 Review

Axglo E5 Electric Push art, A Detailed Review

If you walk 18 regularly, you already know the difference a good cart makes. Not just in how your legs feel on the back nine, but in your pace, your focus, and whether you actually enjoy the round or just survive it. The Axglo E5 electric push cart sits in a sweet spot that a lot of walking golfers are looking for - reliable enough to trust on hilly tracks, loaded with useful features, and flexible enough to match how you actually play.

The Axglo E5 is praised for its stability and battery life, and those aren't just spec-sheet talking points. According to Independent Golf Reviews, the battery lasts for 36 holes officially, with real-world tests pushing that number all the way to 54 holes on the standard battery. That kind of endurance matters when you're playing consecutive days on a golf trip or you just hate worrying about charging between rounds.

What makes the Axglo E5 stand out from other electric golf push carts in its class is the flexibility built into how you use it. The E5 offers multiple modes of operation, so whether you want to steer it manually, send it ahead with remote control, or let it roll alongside you, you can adjust to the situation hole by hole. That's a real benefit on courses where the terrain changes or the layout forces tight turns between greens and tee boxes.

The feature set goes beyond just getting your bag from A to B. As covered in a detailed breakdown on, the E5 comes with comfort grips, an LED screen displaying speed, distance, and battery level, a cup holder, umbrella attachment, phone mount, and wide-tread rear wheels for grip on wet or uneven ground. These aren't flashy add-ons. They're the small things that add up over four hours on your feet.

Now, the Axglo E5 isn't for everyone. If you're after the absolute lightest cart for easy trunk loading, or you want full GPS integration baked in, you might want to compare a few other models first. But for the golfer who values stable handling, a battery that won't quit mid-round, and the kind of practical design that makes walking 18 feel like less work - the E5 deserves serious consideration.

You'll find plenty of discussion about the E5 on forums like GolfWRX, where walkers compare notes on real-world performance with carts from Axglo and competitors alike. Names like Wilson, Matt, and other regular contributors on those threads have shared honest takes that echo what we hear from our own customers. Even the spam-filtering crowd over at Aretera and Akismet can't keep up with how often this cart gets mentioned.

We actually use the gear we sell, and the E5 is one of those carts that earns its spot in the lineup through consistency rather than hype. If you want help figuring out whether it's the right fit for your game, your course, and your car trunk, talk to Nick. He's walked with this cart and can give you the honest rundown in about five minutes.

Unpacking the Axglo E5, Setup and Portability


One of the biggest concerns we hear from golfers shopping for an electric push cart is trunk space. You've got your clubs, your shoes, maybe a cooler if you're being honest about it. The last thing you want is a cart that eats up every square inch of storage.

The Axglo E5 electric push cart addresses that worry head-on. It folds compactly to just 25" x 16.5" x 15", which is small enough to fit in most sedan trunks alongside your bag. At 35 pounds with the battery included, it's light enough that you're not dreading the parking lot carry. If you travel to courses regularly or share trunk space with your buddy's gear, that footprint matters more than most spec sheets let on.

Getting It Ready to Roll

Setup on the Axglo E5 is straightforward. You unfold it, lock it into place, secure your bag, and you're walking. No wrestling with complicated latches or watching a 20-minute YouTube tutorial. The cart comes with comfort grips, a built-in LED screen that displays speed, distance, and battery level, plus a cup holder, umbrella attachment, and phone mount. According to a detailed feature breakdown from MyGolfTeeVee, these convenience touches add real on-course usability without cluttering the design. The wide tread rear wheels give it a stable platform once you're moving, which is something you'll appreciate on dewy morning fairways.

How the Remote Control Performs

The e5 electric golf push cart ships with a remote control that connects to the cart without any manual pairing process. You turn it on, and it works. That kind of reliability sounds basic, but anyone who's fumbled with Bluetooth pairing on the first tee knows it's a big deal. The speed range runs from 0 to 9 km/h, giving you enough flexibility to match your walking pace whether you're strolling a flat municipal track or powering through a longer layout.

One honest note here. As Plugged In Golf, steering precision can feel a bit loose in tight spaces. If you're navigating narrow cart paths or threading between bunkers, you may need to walk up and manually guide the cart rather than relying entirely on the remote. It's not a dealbreaker for most rounds, but it's worth knowing before you buy. We'd rather you hear it from us than discover it on the 3rd hole.

For golfers who want to walk better and play smarter without hauling a heavy rig to and from the car, the Axglo E5 hits a practical sweet spot. It's portable, it's intuitive, and it gets out of your way so you can focus on your game. If you're still on the fence about whether this is the right golf push cart for your situation, talk to Nick and get a straight answer before you spend a dime.

Performance on the Course, Stability and Battery Life

Here's what actually matters when you're walking 18 on a hilly track. Not the color options. Not how it looks on a website. You want to know two things. Will this cart stay upright when the terrain gets uneven? And will the battery outlast your round?

Let's start with stability. The Axglo E5 electric push cart is the most stable of any electric cart I've used. That's not marketing talk. That's the result of walking real courses with real bags loaded up with drivers, fairway woods, hybrids, and all the stuff you actually carry. The wide wheelbase and low center of gravity keep this thing planted, even on side slopes where other carts start to lean or tip. If you play a course with elevation changes or sloped fairways, you'll notice the difference immediately. Your bag stays put. Your clubs stay put. You stop worrying about chasing a runaway cart down a hill.

The three-wheel design helps here, too. Some golfers worry that three wheels means less stability compared to four. With the E5, that concern disappears pretty quickly. The rear axle is wide enough to keep things balanced, and the front wheel tracks true even across wet or soft turf. It handles cart path transitions, rough edges, and bunker surrounds without drama.

Now, battery life. This is the spec that separates a good electric golf push cart from one that leaves you pushing by hand on the back nine. The Axglo E5 is rated for 36 holes on a full charge. That alone is enough for most golfers who play a round and maybe squeeze in a second loop on a good day. But here's where it gets interesting. According to Independent Golf Reviews, real-world testing pushed the standard battery past 54 holes before it gave out. That's three full rounds on a single charge.

Think about what that means for your weekend. You could play Saturday morning, skip the charger, play Sunday afternoon, and still have juice left over. Or if you're the type who plays a quick 18 after work during the week and then goes out again Saturday, you're covered without constantly babysitting a charger.

That kind of endurance also matters as batteries age. Every lithium battery loses a little capacity over time. When you're starting with 54 holes of real-world range, even a 20% drop after a couple of seasons still leaves you well above 36 holes. That's a cushion most electric carts in this price range simply don't offer.

One thing worth noting. Battery life depends on terrain, speed settings, and how much weight you're hauling. If your bag is loaded heavy or you're playing a mountain course, you'll get fewer holes than someone walking a flat Florida track. That's true of every electric cart on the market, not just the E5. But even in demanding conditions, you shouldn't have any trouble getting through 27 to 36 holes comfortably.

For golfers who walk regularly, whether you're carrying a full setup or a lighter bag with your kids golf clubs for a casual nine, the E5's combination of on-course stability and long battery life means less stress and more focus on your game. You walk better, play smarter, and never think about the cart until the round is over. That's exactly how it should be.

User Experience, Console and Control Features

You can read specs all day, but what actually matters is how a cart feels when you're walking 18 and trying to keep pace with the group ahead. The Axglo E5 has a comprehensive console for user convenience, and that's worth unpacking because "comprehensive" can mean a lot of things depending on who's using it.

The console itself sits right at the handle, giving you quick access to speed adjustments, battery status, and basic directional controls without fumbling around. It's intuitive enough that most golfers figure it out within a few holes. No thick manual required. If you've ever struggled with a cart that feels like it needs an engineering degree to operate, the E5 is a breath of fresh air on that front.

Remote Control and Connectivity

Here's where the Axglo E5 earns some real points. The remote control has a strong, stable connection that doesn't require pairing each time you use it. You turn it on and it works. That sounds basic, but if you've dealt with Bluetooth-dependent remotes that drop signal mid-fairway, you know how valuable a reliable connection is.

The speed range runs from 0 to 9 km/h, which gives you plenty of flexibility whether you're a slow stroller or someone who likes to keep things moving between shots. That said, steering lacks precision in tight spaces. Around the green, between bunkers, or navigating a narrow cart path section, the remote can feel a little clumsy. It's not a dealbreaker, but it's something to be aware of if your home course has a lot of pinch points. As Plugged In Golf noted in their review, the connectivity is solid even at distance, though the handling limitations in close quarters are real.

For comparison, something like the Motocaddy M7 handles tighter turns with more finesse, though it comes at a different price point. It depends on what matters more to you.

Battery Indicator and Round Planning

One feature that doesn't get enough credit is the battery readout on the console. Knowing exactly where your charge stands mid-round removes that nagging "will it die on 16?" anxiety. And honestly, with the E5, that anxiety is mostly unfounded. The battery is officially rated for 36 holes, and Independent Golf Reviews found real-world performance exceeding 54 holes on the standard battery. That's three full rounds without plugging in. Even on hilly courses where motors work harder, you're covered well beyond a single 18.

The Honest Take

The console and controls on this electric push cart hit the mark for most walking golfers. You get reliable remote connectivity, a clean interface, and battery monitoring that actually helps you plan your round. The weak spot is precision steering in tight areas, and that's worth factoring in if your course demands a lot of close-quarters maneuvering. But for open fairways, standard layouts, and golfers who just want to send the cart ahead and walk freely, the E5's user experience holds up well.

If you're weighing the E5 against other electric golf push carts and want someone to talk through the differences, talk to Nick. He's used these carts on real courses and can tell you exactly how the controls compare when it counts.

Versatility in Modes, Adapting to Your Game

Here's the thing most golfers don't realize until they're already on the course. Not every hole calls for the same setup from your cart. Sometimes you want full hands-free freedom. Other times you just want a little motor assist on a long uphill walk. The Axglo E5 electric golf push cart gets this, and it gives you five distinct ways to move your bag around the course.

Let's break them down.

Manual Push Mode

This one's straightforward. Turn off the motor, grab the comfort grips, and push the cart yourself. Maybe the battery is topped off and you just feel like getting the full workout. Maybe you're navigating a tight spot between bunkers and want total control. Either way, the wide tread rear wheels roll smooth even without power, so it never feels like you're dragging dead weight.

Power-Assisted Walking Mode

Think of this as the sweet spot between manual and motorized. You're still walking behind the cart and steering with the handle, but the motor takes the strain out of hills and long stretches between holes. If you've ever pushed a loaded bag uphill on a muggy August morning, you know exactly why this mode exists. Your legs do less work. Your back thanks you later.

Basic Remote Control

Now we're getting into the fun stuff. Pull out the remote, send the e5 electric push cart ahead to the green, and walk at your own pace. It's especially handy when you want to line up your approach shot without your bag sitting right next to you. Range is solid, and the controls are intuitive enough that you won't need to dig through a manual on the first tee.

Remote Cruise Control

Same remote, different behavior. Set your speed, let it roll, and the Axglo E5 holds a steady pace on its own. You just steer with directional commands as needed. This one is great for wide-open fairways where you want the cart moving at a consistent clip while you focus on reading the course or cleaning your sunglasses between shots.

Follow-Me Mode

This is the mode that gets the most attention, and honestly, it earns it. The cart tracks behind you as you walk, adjusting speed and direction so you can play completely hands-free. If you've looked at options like the CaddyTrek R3X, you know follow mode is a premium feature. On the Axglo E5, it's baked right in. No separate add-on. No extra cost.

Follow mode genuinely changes the on-course experience. You walk up to your ball, hit your shot, and keep moving. The cart stays with you. It feels less like managing equipment and more like having a quiet caddie who never offers unsolicited swing advice.

Beyond the five modes, the E5 comes loaded with on-course conveniences that actually matter. The LED screen displays your speed, distance walked, and remaining battery life at a glance. There's a cup holder, an umbrella attachment, and a phone mount so your GPS app stays visible without fumbling through pockets. As one detailed review notes, features like the comfort grips and wide tread rear wheels round out the package for real usability, not just spec-sheet padding.

Compared to something like a Motocaddy, which tends to focus on remote control and GPS integration, the Axglo E5 spreads its versatility across a wider range of modes. That means you're not locked into one style of play. Walking a flat muni on Tuesday? Use power-assist. Playing a hilly private track on Saturday? Let follow mode do the heavy lifting.

Five modes might sound like overkill on paper. On the course, you'll probably settle into two or three favorites. But having the option to switch mid-round, without swapping carts or accessories, is the kind of flexibility that makes an electric golf push cart worth the investment.

Real-World User Testimonials, What Golfers Are Saying

Spec sheets only tell you half the story. The other half comes from golfers who have actually loaded this cart into their trunk, unfolded it on the first tee, and walked 18 with it on a muggy Saturday morning. So we dug into what Axglo E5 electric push cart owners are reporting after real rounds on real courses.

The headline that keeps coming up is battery life. Axglo officially rates the E5 for 36 holes on a single charge. That alone is impressive for a cart in this price range. But real-world testing from Independent Golf Reviews found the standard battery exceeding that number, pushing past 54 holes before needing a recharge. That is not a typo. Fifty-four holes on one charge. If you play two or three times a week, you could potentially go a full week without plugging it in. That kind of endurance goes well beyond what the manufacturer claims, and it is one of the things that separates the Axglo E5 electric cart from push variant models that barely squeak through a back nine.

Golfers who walk hilly courses rave about the motor holding steady on inclines without draining the battery the way some competing carts do. One Canadian owner mentioned he plays a mountain course outside Vancouver and the E5 handles his elevation changes without breaking a sweat. That matters, because a cart that dies on hole 14 turns from a luxury into a liability real fast.

Setup and controls get consistent praise, too. Multiple owners say the cart was ready to roll within minutes of unboxing, with intuitive speed adjustments that do not require reading a manual twice. If you have ever struggled with a Bettinardi putter alignment tool, you will appreciate how straightforward the E5 controls feel by comparison.

That said, not every review is glowing. A few golfers note that the fold mechanism takes a little practice before it becomes second nature, and the cart is slightly heavier than some ultralight competitors. If trunk space is tight or you are lifting it in and out of an SUV solo, that extra weight is worth factoring in.

The overall pattern from real owners, though, is clear. The Axglo E5 delivers on its promises and then some. Battery life is the standout, but durability, hill performance, and ease of use earn consistent marks across the board.

Still not sure if it is the right fit for your game? Talk to Nick. He has walked courses with this cart and can give you an honest comparison based on your specific situation. No script, no upsell. Just real advice from someone who actually uses the gear we sell.

Comparative Analysis, Axglo E5 vs. Competitors

So you've narrowed your search down to the Axglo E5. Smart move. But before you pull the trigger, you probably want to know how it stacks up against the other electric push carts in this price range. That's a fair question, and honestly, it's one we get on the phone almost every day.

Let's break it down by the stuff that actually matters when you're walking 18.

Stability on Hills

This is where the Axglo E5 genuinely separates itself. The Anti-Tipping Technology on this cart is no gimmick. It handles steep sidehills that would send most competitors tumbling, and it's rated for slopes up to 40 degrees. If you play a hilly course, that number matters more than almost any other spec on the sheet. A lot of golfers in places like the Chicago area, where courses can have some surprisingly tricky elevation changes, tell us this is the single feature that sold them.

Most competing carts in the same price bracket don't publish a slope rating at all. That should tell you something.

Remote Control and Connectivity

The Axglo E5 remote pairs quickly and maintains a stable connection without the fussy re-pairing some other brands require between rounds. The speed range tops out at about 9 km/h, which is more than enough to keep pace with your group.

One honest caveat worth noting. As Plugged In Golf's review of the E5 pointed out, the steering through tight spaces lacks the precision you might expect. Navigating between bunkers or squeezing through narrow cart paths takes a little extra patience. If your home course has a lot of tight corridors, keep that in mind. It's not a dealbreaker for most golfers, but it's worth knowing upfront rather than being surprised on hole three.

Build Quality and Fold

The E5 folds down compact enough to fit in most midsize sedan trunks. Compared to similarly priced models from other brands, the Axglo feels solid without being unnecessarily heavy. It strikes a good balance between durability and portability, which is exactly what you want if you're loading and unloading it a couple times a week.

Value for Money

Here's the thing. You can always find a cheaper electric push cart. And you can always find a more expensive one. The Axglo E5 sits in that sweet spot where you're getting real engineering, not just a motor bolted onto a frame, without paying flagship prices for features you'll never use.

Brands like Motocaddy and MGI Golf offer excellent carts too, and we carry both. But when customers call Nick and say "I want something stable, reliable, and not overloaded with tech I don't need," the E5 comes up in that conversation more often than not. We actually use the gear we sell, and the Axglo E5 earns its spot in the lineup.

If you're comparing the E5 against carts from Evnroll-adjacent price tiers or debating between a few models, the fastest way to get clarity is to talk to Nick. He'll walk you through the tradeoffs based on your specific course, your trunk space, and your budget. No pressure, just honest advice from someone who's pushed every cart we carry across real fairways.