- Product Dimensions: 26″D x 26″W x 13.9″H
- Brand: FUNPENY
- Material: Aluminum
- Number of Shelves: 1
- Target Audience: Unisex Adult
- QUICK INSTALLATION: The kayak cart dolly wheels trolley is easy to assemble. Saving your preasure time when you go out in a hurry.
- CAPACITY: The trolley can hold up to 176 pounds. Equipped with a buckle belt that can fix the kayak or canoe on the top of the cart, so it can remain stable during movement. It is also equipped with two leg supports, which makes the structure more stable.
- EASY TO STORE: Funpeny kayak canoe carrier cart has a compact design and can be folded flat in your car or boat, which is very convenient for transportation. And the tires can also be easily removed with backup pins.
- GOOD SERVICE: Customer satisfaction is our biggest goal, and we are honored to provide you with quality products. If you have any questions, please contact our service, we will try our best to serve you.





















Benjamin Moss –
The dolly itself is very durable for what i use it for, an inflatable paddleboard. But with the included strap that you presumably put around the entire load, the dolly tends to shift around while in motion. As a result you might be pulling your paddleboard straight on at first, then the dolly shifts making you pull from an angle.This might be a problem for paddleboards only since kayaks can nest into the divots better. To fix this i’ve started using 2 NRS straps on either side of my paddleboard, connecting to the dolly independently. This has fixed this issue but added about 5$ to the overall cost.
Jay S. –
I just put mine together. Once you get it complete, it is very nice. Three things (two actually). First, yes, you put the stems towards the inside because the pin to hold the wheel in place gets in the way a bit. I tried different things (I am pretty good at this) and this method is the only way it works well. Kind of awkward to inflate the tires this way, but not impossible. Second, the pins are kind of tricky. They are about 1/2 inch too long for whatever reason. You need to finagle it into the hole, and the extra length sort of makes it a pain. And there are two ways the circle part can move, one does not engage the internal spring and the other does. Figure out which way is which and make sure when you flip the circle piece down towards the wheel and pin it engages the spring.The last one, and it is really me and not anything necessary, is I prefer to put white lithium grease on all wheel/axle/plate spots because a lack of any lubrication can have long term effects on moving and engaged parts. The wheels ride on two pieces of plastic, which ride on the structural aluminum frame. I put the grease on the parts that the wheel comes in direct contact with. And there are plates sort of built into these parts to keep the wheels centered and not running into the frame. I prefer grease to light oil or WD-40 because it remains in place when the parts move over a period of time. The others will eventually wash out and you would have to take it all apart and re-lubricate. Just a suggestion.
V-from PA –
Great help with getting the kayak by yourself
EC –
It is sturdy, collapse nicely, and it fits inside my kayak’s bow hatch which is a great advantage for me. The size of it is perfect, and it has been working so good when carrying my kayak, which is a 13′ long recreational and has a good weight on it.I would recommend this little trailer to transport a kayak without problems.
Letita Cummings –
The only things that kept me from giving it 5 stars were it was difficult to assemble & does not fold up compactly enough to put in my hold.
Philip walker –
Short cuts. All the way in making this unit poor quality. Just guess how to use
NEMO –
Generally, “you get what you pay for”.This is an entry-level kayak dolly.It gets the job done OK for about half the costs of better units.Instructions warn to washing salt water off after use, and no doubt the cheap steel parts on this unit will corrode.
SRO –
It seemed to work ok the first time I used it , we we’re moving two kayaks to the water. First kayak went smoothly and we were happy, it broke halfway to the water on the second trip. The kayak was a 14 fr tandem kayak and weighed 75 lbs , it had the two chairs in it and a small soft sided cooler of ice and a few drinks in it. The metal bent the wheel in. I’m guessing it’s aluminum to bend that way.