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Informational Only: Georgia dock permit requirements differ significantly between coastal/tidal areas and inland freshwater. Always verify current requirements directly with the Georgia DNR Coastal Resources Division or your county before starting any project.

Georgia's dock permitting system confuses many homeowners because the key document isn't called a "permit" at all — it's called a Revocable License. If you're building a dock that originates from property you own in Georgia, you almost certainly need one. Understanding what a Revocable License is, how it differs from a standard permit, and where it fits alongside the Coastal Marshlands Protection Act permit and Army Corps requirements is the key to navigating Georgia's system.

The Revocable License: Georgia's Core Dock Authorization

Georgia's Revocable License (RL) authority allows structures to occupy public trust lands and water bottoms — the state-owned submerged lands beneath Georgia's tidal and navigable waters. As the name implies, the license can be revoked if the permit holder doesn't comply with its conditions.

🍑 Georgia Dock Key Facts

  • Who issues it: Georgia DNR Coastal Resources Division (CRD), Brunswick office
  • Who needs it: Anyone building a dock that originates from a parcel they own in coastal Georgia
  • Modifying an existing dock: Yes — any modification requires a permit modification, even if the original dock was built before CRD began issuing permits
  • First step: Contact CRD to arrange a site visit with a local Permit Coordinator
  • Army Corps connection: Georgia's Programmatic General Permit (PGP0083) allows Army Corps review to be handled concurrently with the Revocable License process in coastal counties
  • Coastal counties covered: Effingham, Chatham, Bryan, Liberty, Long, McIntosh, Wayne, Glynn, Brantley, Camden, and Charlton

Coastal vs. Inland: Two Very Different Systems

Georgia's dock permitting splits clearly along geographic lines. If you're in one of the 11 coastal counties and your dock will be in or adjacent to tidal marshlands, coastal waters, or the state's estuaries, the Coastal Resources Division (CRD) in Brunswick is your primary agency. If you're inland on a freshwater lake or reservoir, different rules apply — typically through Georgia Environmental Protection Division (EPD) and potentially the Army Corps, depending on whether the water body is navigable.

Coastal Docks: The CRD Process

For coastal docks, the process involves two overlapping regulatory frameworks:

1. Coastal Marshlands Protection Act (CMPA) Permit: Required for any project that impacts Georgia's jurisdictional marshlands and tidal water bodies. This includes docks, shoreline stabilization, marinas, bridges, and dredging. The CMPA permit is issued by CRD and requires a full application with site plans, photographs, and environmental impact information.

2. Revocable License: Issued as a standard component of the CMPA, Individual Dock Permit, and Bank Stabilization permit processes. For most individual dock projects in coastal Georgia, the Revocable License is bundled with the CMPA permit — you're not filing two separate applications. The RL authorizes the structure to occupy the state's public trust lands (the water bottoms beneath your dock).

The Army Corps Programmatic General Permit (PGP0083)

In all 11 Georgia coastal counties, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Savannah District) has issued a Programmatic General Permit (PGP0083) that streamlines the federal review for recreational docks. Under PGP0083, the Army Corps authorizes CRD to administer federal permit review concurrently with the state permit process — meaning you don't have to file separately with the Army Corps for most standard residential dock projects in coastal Georgia.

For questions specific to dock permits in Effingham, Chatham, Bryan, Liberty, or Long counties, the PGP Coordinator can be reached at (912) 266-3695. For McIntosh, Wayne, Glynn, Brantley, Camden, or Charlton counties, call (912) 266-0642.

How to Start the Georgia Coastal Dock Permit Process

Georgia's CRD specifically recommends beginning with a site visit — not with a paper application. Here's the recommended sequence:

Step 1: Contact CRD and Request a Site Visit

Call or email the CRD Brunswick office to describe your project and request a site visit with a local Permit Coordinator. The Permit Coordinator will visit your property, assess the proposed dock location, identify any environmental constraints, and guide you through the specific requirements for your project. This step is not optional — it's how Georgia's system is designed to work.

Step 2: Gather Application Materials

Based on the site visit, you'll know exactly what's required. Typical application materials include: a survey or site plan showing property boundaries and proposed dock location, photographs of the shoreline and marsh from multiple angles, and a description of dock dimensions and materials. For projects near or in marshlands, additional environmental information may be required.

Step 3: Submit Application to CRD

Submit the completed application to the CRD Brunswick office. For coastal docks that also require Army Corps review under PGP0083, your application materials go to the PGP Dock Permit Coordinator — CRD coordinates the Army Corps side of the review on your behalf for qualifying projects.

Step 4: Public Notice (for Larger Projects)

CMPA permits for larger or more complex projects may require a public notice period during which adjacent property owners and the public can comment. Simple single-family dock permits typically do not require extensive public notice, but the complexity of your project determines this.

Step 5: Permit and Revocable License Issuance

Once approved, your CMPA permit and Revocable License are issued together. Retain these documents permanently — they are required documentation if you ever modify the dock or sell your property.

Community Docks and Shared Structures

Applicants who want a single dock shared with more than four waterfront residents, or any non-waterfront residents, must use the full Individual Permit (IP) process rather than the standard CRD process. Community docks and any commercial marina arrangements also require an Individual Permit and potentially a submerged land lease. The base annual lease fee for for-profit marina facilities is set at $1,000 per acre (as of 2009, adjusted annually by CPI).

Existing Docks Built Before CRD Issued Permits

If your dock was built before CRD began issuing permits and has never been formally permitted, you still need a new permit if you want to modify it. CRD's position is explicit: pre-permit structures that have never been through the CRD process are not grandfathered in for modifications. A new permit application is required, and CRD will review the structure as part of that process to confirm it can be approved in its current form or with modifications.

Inland Georgia: Freshwater Lakes and Reservoirs

For Georgia property owners on inland lakes (Lake Lanier, Lake Oconee, Lake Hartwell, Lake Sinclair, and others), the permitting picture is different:

Agency Contacts — Georgia

AgencyRoleContact
GA DNR Coastal Resources Division CMPA permits, Revocable Licenses, coastal dock authorization (912) 264-7218 (general) | coastalgadnr.org/MarshShore
Army Corps — Savannah District (PGP Coordinator) Federal PGP dock permits, coastal counties Chatham/Bryan/Liberty/Long/Effingham: (912) 266-3695
McIntosh/Wayne/Glynn/Brantley/Camden/Charlton: (912) 266-0642
Georgia Power Lake Services Dock permits on Lake Oconee, Lake Sinclair 1-888-660-5890 | georgiapower.com/lakes
U.S. Army Corps — Savannah & Mobile Districts Dock permits on inland Army Corps reservoirs (Lake Lanier, Hartwell, etc.) sas.usace.army.mil | sam.usace.army.mil
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Free Download: Dock Permit Application Prep Checklist

Includes site plan requirements, photo checklist, and agency coordination notes for Georgia's CRD/Army Corps combined process.

Download Free PDF →

Frequently Asked Questions — Georgia Dock Permits

The name reflects the nature of the authorization. A Revocable License is a formal grant from the state allowing a private structure to occupy state-owned public trust lands (the water bottoms beneath Georgia's tidal and navigable waters). The "revocable" designation means the state retains the right to revoke the license if the permit holder violates its conditions — such as expanding the dock without approval, failing to maintain it, or using it in ways inconsistent with the license. In practice, for homeowners who maintain their docks in compliance, the license functions similarly to a traditional permit. It is transferred when property changes hands, but the new owner must apply for a formal transfer within a specified timeframe.
No — Lake Lanier is a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers reservoir managed by the Corps' Savannah District. Dock permits on Lake Lanier are handled by the Corps under its Lake Lanier residential dock permit program, not by CRD (which handles coastal areas). Contact the Army Corps Savannah District's Lake Lanier management office directly for current dock permit requirements, which include specific design standards, fees, and application procedures unique to that reservoir.
The Revocable License is tied to the property, not the individual owner. When a property with a licensed dock is sold, the new owner must apply to CRD for a transfer of the license. CRD will typically require the new owner to confirm the dock is in compliance with the original permit conditions. If modifications have been made without permit approval, those need to be addressed — either by obtaining a modification permit or by bringing the structure into compliance. Buyers purchasing coastal Georgia waterfront property should always request documentation of the dock's Revocable License as part of due diligence.
In October 2024, CRD activated emergency orders to expedite permit requests related to repair and reconstruction of hurricane-damaged structures in coastal Georgia communities. Emergency orders of this type are typically time-limited and designed for specific storm recovery situations. As of 2026, the standard permitting process applies for new construction projects. If you're dealing with storm-damaged dock repair specifically, contact CRD to confirm whether any expedited processing pathways remain available for your situation.
You can file the application yourself — CRD is set up to work directly with property owners and doesn't require an agent or attorney. The site visit process is specifically designed to help property owners understand requirements without needing professional intermediaries. That said, for larger or more complex projects (community docks, projects in sensitive marsh areas, or projects that require Army Corps Individual Permit review rather than the PGP process), hiring an environmental consultant or permit specialist can reduce delays and application errors. For a straightforward single-family dock, most property owners can navigate the CRD process independently with CRD's guidance.
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