What Are the Most Popular Colours in BERG Go-Karts?

If you’re thinking about getting a BERG Go-Kart for your child—or just love seeing what new models are out—one of the first choices you’ll face is colour. BERG offer a huge variety of shades, color schemes, and licensed “themes” (Jeep®, John Deere, BMW, etc.).

Bright red & black, bold blues, and classic farm greens (like John Deere) are the most popular BERG Go-Kart colours, with pinks, pastels, and licensed themes also loved by younger kids.

Here’s a roundup of what colours are available, which ones seem to be favourites, and what factors tend to make certain colours more appealing or practical.


What Colours Are Available Across the BERG Range

First, a quick summary of the palette and how it changes depending on model, age, and line. This gives context so you see why some colours are more common/popular than others.

Line / Size / Age Group Typical Colour Choices / Themes
GO² (10-30 months / toddlers) Softer / pastel or gentle shades: pink, blue, mint, “retro yellow-grey” combos. 
Buzzy (2-5 years) Sporty or playful colours: Black + Orange (Nitro edition), Pink + Purple (Bloom), Cream & Brown tones (Retro), licensed “jeep / off-road” greens. 
Reppy (2.5-6 years) Bold combinations & racing style: Red & Black (Racer), Black & Yellow (Rebel), Blue & Orange (Roadster), some licensed colours (BMW etc). 
Buddy (3-8 years) A broad mix: “Buddy Blue”, “Buddy Pink”, “Buddy Cross” (Black/Orange), “Lua” (white & pink), and licensed designs. 
Rally (4-12 years) Slightly more grown-up / sporty colours: Orange, Bold Blue/Red combinations, Force Green, Jeep editions etc. 
XL / XXL & Licensed / Tractor / Farm Themes Classic “tractor / farm machine” colours: green + yellow (John Deere, Fendt etc), blue (New Holland), lime green / grey (CLAAS), black / blue (BMW), red / black / yellow etc. 

Which Colours Seem to Be Most Popular & Why

From what we see in customer demand, stock listings, and what families tend to choose, here are the colours that are standing out as the favourites — plus the reasons behind their popularity.

  1. Red & Black
    Bright, striking, sporty. Red is always a classic for toy-vehicles: it gives a visible, active look. When paired with black, it gives contrast (black wheels, frames, accents) that makes the design “pop.” Many “Racer”-type models or competition-feeling frames use this combo.

  2. Blue Tones
    Whether bright blue, royal blue, or more subdued metallic/grey-blues (especially in licensed editions), blue is very popular with both boys and girls. It tends to strike a good balance: bold, but not overly loud.

  3. Licensed Greens and Yellow / Tractor Colours
    For kids who love real machines, “farm” colours are a major draw. John Deere green + yellow, Fendt green, CLAAS lime-green and grey, etc., are big in rural or semi-rural families, or those who want something distinctive. These colours often work also because they evoke brands kids know.

  4. Black, Grey, and “Neutral / Dark” Accents
    Colourful base (red, blue, orange etc) with dark/black or grey framing, wheels, chassis is very common. It looks cleaner, hides dirt, generally lasts better in appearance. Also, it allows the bright/colourful bits to shine without the whole kart looking overstated.

  5. Bright / Pastel Colours and Theme Variants
    For younger children, colours like pink, mint, pastel blue or fun “retro” shades are popular. Themed editions (Jeep style, NASCAR / racing stripe, etc) also help people pick something that feels special.

  6. Orange / Yellow Accents
    These are often used as highlight colours (stripes / rims / frames) rather than whole-body finishes, but are popular because they add energy. They work well paired with darker colours for contrast.


Trends: What’s Growing in Popularity

Some noticeable shifts in recent seasons (from observing stock, buyer behaviour, and what’s new from BERG):

  • More neutral / dark accent colours are being used (black/grey frames etc) so the brighter colours don’t look gaudy. That helps the kart look well kept longer (dirt & weather don’t show up as much).

  • Licensed editions (farm brands, car brands) are more frequent and more visually polished; these usually come in colour schemes faithful to the licensed design (e.g., John Deere green + yellow) and sell well because of recognisable branding.

  • Younger-age models are showing more colour variety (soft pastels, retro shades) as parents treat them almost like design items for indoors / parks / gardens, not just toys.

  • There’s a general trend toward versatility: colours that match outdoor settings, garden furniture, patios etc. So mid-tones, greys, darker wheels/frames are favored.


What Colours Are Less Common or Less Practical

It helps to know not just what people love, but which colours may look nice but cause problems, or which are rarely seen because of issues like fading, dirt visibility, mismatch, etc.

  • Very light colours all over (especially white or cream) look great, but dirty quickly show scuffs, mud, rain marks. Unless your child is meticulous, or you’re prepared to clean frequently, it may lose appeal.

  • Overly bright neon shades can be visually striking, but often fade faster in sun, or don’t photograph or look as “premium.”

  • Colour mismatches (e.g., variations between batches) sometimes happen especially with licensed models: green might differ, shades might shift.

  • Colours like bright pink or pastel pink are very popular for young ages or gift-occasions, but among older kids they may be less chosen due to peer preference or design style.


How to Pick a Colour You’ll Still Be Happy With

Given so many choices, here are some tips to pick colours that combine appeal and practicality.

  1. Match with Accessories or Surroundings
    Look at the wheels, frame colour, tyre rims. If parts are plastic or black, getting a kart with matching or complementing accents helps. Also consider garden furniture, paving, fence colour – a kart that fits in tends to look better over time.

  2. Go for Licensed Themes if Your Child Has a Favourite
    If your child loves tractors, cars or a brand like Jeep, John Deere etc, those designs are very strong picks because they feel more authentic. Often they hold resale or aesthetic value too.

  3. Balance Bright and Neutral
    A base colour that’s bright, with neutral/darker structural elements (black frames, grey accents) typically gives the best of both worlds: fun looks, but less harsh maintenance.

  4. Think Long-Term Use
    If the kart will be used for several years, a colour that still looks good when the toddler stage is over or when there’s a bit of wear is wise. Darker colours or classic schemes (red-black, green-yellow) tend to age well visually.

  5. Consider Safety / Visibility
    Bright colours (orange, yellow, bright red) are helpful for visibility, especially if your child might ride near roads, paths or in low light.

  6. Availability of Spare Parts / Matching Extras
    If matching trailers, accessories, seats etc are in the same colour scheme — sometimes easier if you choose a more popular/licensed colour. Spare body panels or badges sometimes get discontinued for less popular colours.


What We See as Favourites at Trampolines Ireland

Based on orders, inquiries, and what people browse most often in our shop, here’s a snapshot of what colours tend to be the most popular among our customers:

  • Red-Black / Racing Combinations come up a lot, especially in “Reppy”, “Rally” and “XL” lines.

  • Green + Yellow (John Deere / Farm-style) is especially popular in rural areas or families with farm experience; it also does well when gifted (kids love tractors).

  • Bright Blue variants are consistently among the top sells, especially with younger children (Buddy, Rally, Reppy lines).

  • Black / Orange (Cross / Nitro / Off-road theme) is liked by kids who want something looking rugged and adventurous.

  • Licensed editions (Jeep, BMW etc) are always in demand; although more expensive, people see them as “worth it” for the look and recognisability.

  • Pastel & themed “pink / purple” remains strong for toddler gifts or for kids who care about colour choice (especially in GO² / Buzzy / Buddy lines).


Summary: What Colours Offer the Best Value

Putting everything together:

  • If you want the most lasting value, go with a licensed or classic colour (e.g. green/yellow, red/black, blue) paired with neutral accents.

  • For a toddler / younger age, pick something fun and colourful—but one that doesn’t show dirt too easily. Pastels look lovely but need a little more care.

  • If your priority is visibility, safety, or matching garden / surroundings, bright colours with dark structural elements are smart.

  • Because BERG provides many colour options, you’ll almost certainly find one that suits both style and practicality. It’s mostly a matter of balancing how “flashy” versus how “sturdy-looking” you want the kart to be.