Missouri dock permitting is shaped primarily by the Missouri Department of Natural Resources (MDNR) and the Army Corps of Engineers, with a significant additional layer for the state's most popular recreational lake — Lake of the Ozarks — which has its own detailed dock permit program through the dam licensee, Ameren Missouri.
🌉 Missouri Quick Facts
- Lake of the Ozarks: Ameren Missouri Lake of the Ozarks Permit (FERC licensee)
- Table Rock Lake: Army Corps Little Rock District
- Bull Shoals Lake: Army Corps Little Rock District
- Missouri / Mississippi Rivers: Army Corps Kansas City or St. Louis Districts
- MO DNR: 573-751-3443 | dnr.mo.gov
- Army Corps KC District: 816-389-3990 | nwk.usace.army.mil
Lake of the Ozarks is Missouri's premier recreational lake and one of the most heavily boated lakes in the United States. The lake is impounded by Bagnell Dam, operated by Ameren Missouri under a FERC license. All dock permits on Lake of the Ozarks — regardless of size — go through Ameren Missouri's Lake of the Ozarks Permit Program (573-365-9200 or amerenotf.com). Ameren has detailed dock design standards covering size limits, setbacks, construction materials, water depth requirements, and boat lift specifications. This is separate from any state or Army Corps permit requirement.
Table Rock Lake (near Branson) and Bull Shoals Lake are Army Corps of Engineers reservoirs managed by the Little Rock District (501-324-5551). Dock permits on these lakes require a Corps Shoreline Use Permit or License Agreement.
Free Download: Dock Permit Application Prep Checklist
Covers Ameren Missouri, Army Corps, and MO DNR dock permit requirements.
Download Free PDF →Pro Tips for Missouri Dock Applicants
Lake of the Ozarks is one of the most dock-dense lakes in the United States, and Ameren Missouri's permit program reflects that complexity. Ameren publishes annual updates to its Lake of the Ozarks dock design standards — download the current year's standards from amerenotf.com before designing your dock, not after. Standards for covered slips, boat lifts, and dock extensions have changed in recent years, and using outdated design standards is a common source of application rejection.
One Lake of the Ozarks-specific detail that trips up many applicants: dock permits are associated with a specific property and a specific cove mile marker. The application requires you to accurately identify the cove name and mile marker for your property. Ameren uses this location data to manage cumulative dock density in each cove. Properties in higher-density coves may face stricter size limitations or enhanced setback requirements.
For the Truman Reservoir (Harry S. Truman Lake) — managed by the Army Corps Kansas City District — dock permits are available for residential properties within the Corps' managed shoreline area. Contact the Kansas City District's Natural Resources office at 816-389-3990 for current Truman Reservoir dock permit requirements, which differ from the Ameren/FERC process used at Lake of the Ozarks.