MO Missouri Porch

Boating, Paddling & Water Safety

Missouri's two water worlds, by the rules

Missouri is a water state in two completely different ways: the big lakes — motorboats, pontoons, jet skis — and the float streams — canoes, kayaks, rafts, and tubes. The gear, the dangers, and the rules differ. Figure out which world you're in, and the rest gets simple.

The one idea

The lakes: The lakes — Lake of the Ozarks, Table Rock, Truman, and the rest. This is the world of motorboats, pontoons, ski boats, and jet skis. Registration, the boater card, no-wake and speed rules, and boating-while-intoxicated law live mostly here.

The float streams: The float streams — the Current, Jacks Fork, Meramec, Niangua, and other Ozark rivers. This is the world of canoes, kayaks, rafts, and tubes. The paperwork is lighter (no registration for paddle craft), but the natural danger is heavier, and there's a glass-and-container rulebook.

Three rules are universal, on any water: wear a life jacket, never operate impaired, and respect the water. The boat doesn't have to be big or fast to be dangerous — and the life jacket only works if you're wearing it.

Part of the Missouri outdoors guides — see also Fishing, Camping, Foraging, and Weather & Natural Hazards (lightning and storms on the water).

Start with your craft

What does your craft need?

Find what you're putting on the water in the left column. A motorboat carries the most paperwork; a paddle craft almost none — but everyone needs a life jacket.

Your craft Title & register? Boater card? Must carry
Motorboat Yes — title and register with DOR. Yes, if born after Jan. 1, 1984 and operating on a lake. A wearable PFD per person, a fire extinguisher (per the USCG rules), a sound device, nav lights after dark, and your registration.
PWC / jet ski Yes — title and register. Yes, if born after Jan. 1, 1984. A worn PFD for everyone aboard, the engine cutoff lanyard, a marine extinguisher, and your registration.
Sailboat over 12 ft Yes — title and register. Only if it's motorized and you were born after Jan. 1, 1984; sail-only has no card trigger. A wearable PFD per person, a sound device, and nav lights after dark.
Canoe, kayak or paddleboard (paddle-only) No — exempt at any length. No. One wearable PFD per person, a white light after dark, and sealed nonglass containers.
Rowboat (oar-only) No — exempt. No. One wearable PFD per person and a white light after dark.
Rental motorboat / PWC The livery's boat is already registered. The card, or a temporary rental permit plus a safety briefing. PFDs and the gear the livery provides — check it before you leave the dock.

Lake vs. river

Two worlds, two rulebooks

The same word — "boating" — covers two very different worlds in Missouri, and several rules split right down the middle. Here's where they differ:

Rule On the lakes On the float streams
Boater card Required on the lakes for motorized operators born after Jan. 1, 1984. No card trigger for paddle craft.
100-ft no-wake Slow–No-Wake within 100 ft of a dock, pier, anchored boat, or restricted area (RSMo 306.125). Follow POSTED no-wake zones and the managing agency's rules.
Boating while intoxicated Applies to boats under engine or sail power (Chapter 577, 0.08% BAC). Pure paddle and oar craft fall outside BWI — but impaired paddling is still dangerous and can trigger other violations.
Containers & alcohol No statewide open-container ban on the water — but BWI still applies, so whoever's driving stays sober. Sealed nonglass containers, a trash bag attached, and no glass on capsize-prone vessels (306.325) — plus no beer bongs or 4+ gallon containers, except on the Mississippi, Missouri, and Osage (306.109).
The main danger Big, fast boats, wakes, and storms that build fast over open water. Strainers, low-head dams, foot entrapment, and flash floods.

Start here

New to it? Start here

Rules & gear

Paperwork, rules & required gear

Craft & activities

Jet skis, towing & float trips

Where & safety

Where to go, and how to stay safe

Before you launch

Missouri Porch explains; the Highway Patrol, the DOR, and the agency that runs your water decide.

Last checked: 2026-06-18. Boating law, fees, and local lake and river rules change — and the water itself changes with the weather and the season. Confirm before you launch, and wear your life jacket.

This is a plain-English summary, not the law or a substitute for a boating course. Boating rules and fees change — confirm with the Highway Patrol, the Department of Revenue, and the agency that runs your water. In an emergency, call 911.

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