
Kubota SVL95-2 vs Bobcat T650: which CTL holds up in sand and pine straw
Two popular compact track loaders tested against Florida terrain — soft ground, tight lots, and attachment versatility.
Compact track loaders are the Swiss Army knives of Florida job sites. Between land clearing, grading, material handling, and attachment work, a good CTL earns its keep faster than almost any other machine class. The Kubota SVL95-2 and Bobcat T650 are two of the most common units we see coming through https://equipmentsupplyservice.com, and buyers routinely ask which one to choose.

Ground pressure on Florida sand
Florida's sandy soil is unforgiving to heavy machines with small footprints. Both the SVL95-2 and T650 run rubber tracks with similar contact patch areas, but the Kubota is about 600 lbs lighter at operating weight. That translates directly to lower ground pressure — a meaningful advantage on soft, waterlogged residential lots after a summer rain. The Bobcat compensates with wider track options, but those add cost.
Rated operating capacity
The T650 edges the Kubota on rated operating capacity: roughly 2,570 lbs at 35% tipping load versus the SVL95-2's 2,100 lbs. If you are running a 4-in-1 bucket full of wet topsoil or stacking pallets of sod, that extra 470 lbs matters. But most operators never sustain max capacity all day — and the Kubota's lighter weight means less track wear and lower fuel burn at partial loads.
Cab comfort for Florida heat
Both machines offer enclosed cabs with AC — a non-negotiable feature in Florida. The Kubota cab is slightly wider and the seat suspension is praised by operators who run the machine 8+ hours daily. Bobcat's cab gets excellent marks for visibility, with a lower dash profile and larger side windows. In practice, operator preference tends to split 50/50 — try both before you buy. We keep both brands on the yard at https://equipmentsupplyservice.com when available.
Parts and dealer network
Bobcat has a denser dealer network in Florida through dealerships like Bobcat of Jacksonville and multiple South Florida locations. Kubota parts come through agricultural dealer channels, which are plentiful in rural Florida but thinner in metro areas. For common wear items (filters, tracks, cutting edges), both are readily available through aftermarket suppliers. For hydraulic components and ECU-level repairs, dealer proximity matters. Check which dealer is closer to your primary job sites before committing.
Permalink: https://equipmentsupplyservice.com /blog/kubota-svl95-vs-bobcat-t650-track-loader
More in Equipment
Equipment2025-09-02 · ~10 min
John Deere 644K wheel loader: the numbers quarry crews quote back to us
A high-level pass on published weight, power, and bucket—useful context before you compare a used unit to your spread.
Continue reading
Equipment2025-06-12 · ~9 min
Cat 320 vs John Deere 350P excavator: what Florida dirt work actually tells you
Two mid-size excavators. Same job sites. Different philosophies. We break down what Florida trench work reveals that spec sheets hide.
Continue reading
Equipment2025-06-11 · ~12 min
Telehandler load charts: how to read capacity at height without fooling yourself
Lift capacity is not one number—it is a surface. Here is the plain-English version we give crews before they sign a rental or buy a stick.
Continue reading