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Informational Only: Texas dock permitting is highly dependent on which water body you're on and which River Authority has jurisdiction. Always identify the correct managing agency for your specific location before applying.

Texas dock permitting is uniquely complex because the state has no single statewide dock permitting agency. Depending on where your waterfront property is located, you may need authorization from the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department (TPWD), one of Texas's independent River Authorities, the Texas General Land Office, the Army Corps of Engineers, or a combination of all four. Identifying the correct agencies for your specific water body is the essential first step.

Why Texas Is Different: The River Authority System

Texas established a network of River Authorities — independent governmental entities with regulatory and management authority over specific river basins and their reservoirs. Most of Texas's major recreational lakes are actually impoundments managed by one of these River Authorities, not directly by the state. Each River Authority has its own permit requirements, dock design standards, fees, and application processes.

⭐ Major Texas River Authorities and Their Lakes

  • Lower Colorado River Authority (LCRA): Lakes Travis, Austin, LBJ, Marble Falls, Inks, Buchanan — the Highland Lakes chain
  • Guadalupe-Blanco River Authority (GBRA): Canyon Lake and Guadalupe River
  • Brazos River Authority: Possum Kingdom Lake, Lake Granbury, Lake Limestone
  • Sabine River Authority: Toledo Bend Reservoir (shared with Louisiana)
  • Upper Guadalupe River Authority (UGRA): Upper Guadalupe reaches
  • Trinity River Authority: Lake Livingston, others
  • Tarrant Regional Water District: Eagle Mountain Lake, Lake Benbrook, others

If your property is on any of these lakes, your dock permit application goes directly to that River Authority — not TPWD and not the Army Corps as a first step. Each authority has its own application forms, design standards, and fee schedules.

LCRA: The Most Common Texas Dock Permit Scenario

The Lower Colorado River Authority manages the popular Highland Lakes chain west of Austin — Lakes Travis, LBJ, Marble Falls, Inks, and Buchanan — which are among the most heavily boated lakes in Texas. LCRA's dock permitting program is among the most developed in the state.

LCRA Permit Types for Docks

LCRA dock permits require compliance with specific setback rules from neighboring property lines, navigation channel markers, and utility lines. LCRA publishes detailed dock design guidelines covering maximum dock footprint, boathouse dimensions, boat lift specifications, and setback requirements. Download the current guidelines from lcra.org before designing your dock.

Water Level Fluctuations on Highland Lakes

The Highland Lakes experience significant water level fluctuations driven by drought and flood cycles. LCRA's dock design standards specifically address variable water levels — dock structures must be designed to remain safe and functional across the range of expected lake levels. During extreme drought years when Lake Travis drops dramatically, many docks end up on dry land. Design your dock with Texas's boom-and-bust water cycle in mind.

Possum Kingdom Lake: Brazos River Authority

Possum Kingdom Lake is managed by the Brazos River Authority (BRA). Dock permits on Possum Kingdom go through BRA's lake services department. BRA has specific dock and boathouse design standards, maximum size limitations, and setback requirements unique to Possum Kingdom. The BRA permit application requires site plans showing property boundaries, proposed dock location, and dimensions. Contact BRA at 940-779-2321 or through brazos.org for current requirements.

Canyon Lake: GBRA

Canyon Lake near New Braunfels is managed by the Guadalupe-Blanco River Authority. Dock construction on Canyon Lake requires a GBRA permit. Canyon Lake has specific design standards including limitations on covered boathouse structures and requirements for boat lifts. Contact GBRA at 830-964-2830 or gbra.org for the current dock permit application.

Toledo Bend Reservoir: Cross-State Complexity

Toledo Bend Reservoir straddles the Texas-Louisiana border and is co-managed by the Sabine River Authority of Texas (SRAT) and the Sabine River Authority of Louisiana. Dock permits on the Texas side go through SRAT. Because the reservoir is jointly managed under a federal license, dock permits also involve coordination with FERC (Federal Energy Regulatory Commission) guidelines. This is one of the more complex dock permit situations in the state.

Coastal Texas: GLO and Army Corps

Texas's Gulf Coast introduces additional layers. For docks on tidal waters — bays, estuaries, tidal rivers, and the Intracoastal Waterway — the Texas General Land Office (GLO) manages the state's public submerged lands. A GLO lease or easement is required to use state-owned tidal water bottoms for dock construction. The Army Corps of Engineers Galveston District has Section 10 and 404 jurisdiction over navigable tidal Texas waters.

Water Body TypePrimary Permit AgencyAlso Required
Highland Lakes (Travis, LBJ, etc.)LCRACounty building permit
Possum Kingdom, GranburyBrazos River AuthorityCounty building permit
Canyon LakeGBRACounty building permit
Toledo Bend (TX side)Sabine River Authority (TX)FERC coordination
Lake LivingstonTrinity River AuthorityCounty building permit
Tidal bays / coastalTX General Land Office + Army CorpsCounty; TCEQ 401 cert
Private freshwater lakesGenerally none (state level)County building permit; Army Corps if navigable

TPWD's Role: Fishing Piers and Habitat

Texas Parks and Wildlife Department does not directly issue dock construction permits for most residential situations. However, TPWD may be involved when: your project is on a state-owned water body, the project involves impacts to aquatic habitat requiring a TPWD consultation, or you're building a fishing pier on state-managed waters. TPWD is also the agency to contact for questions about impacts to fish and wildlife during dock construction.

Army Corps: Fort Worth and Galveston Districts

The Army Corps' Fort Worth District covers most of inland Texas. The Galveston District covers coastal and near-coastal Texas. For docks on navigable rivers (Brazos, Trinity, Colorado below Austin, Red River reaches) or in tidal coastal waters, Army Corps Nationwide Permit or Individual Permit review applies independently of any River Authority permit.

Agency Contacts — Texas

AgencyJurisdictionContact
LCRA Lake and Shoreline ManagementHighland Lakes512-473-3200 | lcra.org/lakemanagement
Brazos River Authority Lake ServicesPossum Kingdom, Granbury, Limestone940-779-2321 | brazos.org
GBRACanyon Lake830-964-2830 | gbra.org
TX General Land OfficeTidal / coastal submerged lands512-463-5001 | glo.texas.gov
Army Corps — Fort Worth DistrictInland navigable rivers817-886-1731 | swf.usace.army.mil
Army Corps — Galveston DistrictCoastal / tidal Texas409-766-3801 | swg.usace.army.mil
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Free Download: Dock Permit Application Prep Checklist

Covers site plan requirements, agency contact documentation, and fee confirmation items for any Texas River Authority or Army Corps application.

Download Free PDF →

Frequently Asked Questions — Texas Dock Permits

Lake Travis is managed by LCRA — apply directly to LCRA's Lake and Shoreline Management department. TPWD does not issue dock permits for Highland Lakes properties. LCRA's website (lcra.org) has the current dock permit application, design guidelines, and fee schedule. Your county building department may also require a separate local building permit, so contact them in parallel with your LCRA application.
Texas does not have a statewide size-based dock exemption comparable to Minnesota's 8-foot rule or Michigan's Part 301 seasonal exemption. Each River Authority sets its own standards. For private freshwater lakes not managed by a River Authority and not connected to navigable waterways, Texas generally does not require a state-level permit for dock construction — but county building permits still typically apply. The absence of a River Authority does not mean the Army Corps lacks jurisdiction if the water body is navigable.
The Guadalupe River is subject to Guadalupe-Blanco River Authority (GBRA) oversight for much of its length. Additionally, the Guadalupe River is navigable in significant reaches, meaning Army Corps of Engineers Section 10 jurisdiction applies. You'll likely need coordination with both GBRA and the Army Corps Fort Worth or Galveston District depending on your specific location. Contact GBRA at 830-964-2830 as a first step, and make a parallel pre-application call to the relevant Army Corps District to clarify federal jurisdiction.
No — LCRA's permit requirements apply regardless of current water level. In fact, building during low water without proper permits is specifically flagged by LCRA as a common violation pattern. LCRA regularly surveys the Highland Lakes shoreline, and structures built during drought conditions without permits are subject to enforcement when water levels return to normal. The permit process accounts for the full range of expected lake levels; this is why LCRA's design standards include requirements about dock design relative to variable water levels. Always obtain the LCRA permit before beginning any construction.
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