Karting is one of the rare activities where a 10-year-old and a 40-year-old adult have a blast together on the same track. But "together" takes a bit of planning, especially when skill levels, ages and expectations vary within the same group. Here's how to pull it off so everyone heads home smiling.
Picking the right track for everyone
This is the key step. A track with a single layout can't keep both a 7-year-old and an adult who's serious about driving happy. The best tracks for a family outing keep the practices separate.
Indoor venues often play this card to the hilt. At Aerokart, in Argenteuil, kids (from age 7 and 1.30 m, on 120 cc karts) never drive at the same time as adults: the sessions are split, so no more dangerous speed gaps. At Rouen Espace Loisirs, the electric karts come in kid and adult versions, with a two-seater to take the youngest along for the ride.
Before you book, check three things: the minimum age and height (they vary hugely from one track to the next), whether there's a place to eat (karting days stretch out fast) and the parking. To help you choose between covered and open air, take a look at our comparison of indoor versus outdoor.
Handling differences in age and skill
The classic trap: the keen parent racking up sessions on the technical track while the little ones get bored. Or the opposite, laps too short and too tame for the adults.
The two-seater is the secret weapon of family outings. At Brignoles Karting Loisir, in the Var, a child can climb in as co-driver from age 4 alongside an adult. And some tracks go even lower: the baby kart at KHUB Arras welcomes children from age 2, accompanied. At Karting de Saint-Malo, adapted karts start from age 3, with supervised courses for the 7 to 13 age group.
The right approach: split the day in two. A shared slot, where everyone drives in a format that suits them, and free time where each person does their own thing. At ITEK-Karting, near Angoulême, the Family Klub package even offers coaching that mixes parents and kids in the same outing. And above all, don't force anyone: a child who'd rather watch a few laps has every right to stay trackside.
Prepping the kids before the session
A child who's had two or three things explained before getting in does far better than one who discovers everything at the start line. No driving lesson required.
Two minutes is enough: "You accelerate with your right foot, you brake with your left foot. To turn right, you turn the wheel right. If something's wrong, raise your hand." The essential part is that they know how to stop the kart if something goes wrong. For the rest, our guide to karting with children breaks down the preparation by age.
Anticipating surprises
Kids can get scared at the last moment: the noise, the gear, the unknown. No pressure. A child who watches a few laps before jumping in will often be more at ease than one who's pushed straight into the seat.
On the clothing side: closed shoes are mandatory everywhere, and pack clothes that are neither too warm (the loaned suit already keeps you warm) nor too light on a windy outdoor track. The helmet is provided, but if your child is very sensitive to noise, earplugs under the helmet change everything. Before you go, a glance at the essential safety rules and at choosing a helmet never hurts.
Karting remains one of the finest activities to share across generations, as long as you pick a track that plays along. To find the ones that welcome families near you, explore all the karting tracks on Kart-Map and filter by your type of driving.






