Southwest Missouri
Stockton Lake is a Corps of Engineers reservoir, so the shoreline rules come from the Corps
A Cedar County parcel near Stockton Lake sits next to federally managed water and shoreline, so dock and shoreline rights come from the Army Corps of Engineers rather than the county, and a buyer counting on a private dock should confirm what the Corps actually allows
Stockton Lake is a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers lake. The Corps’ Kansas City District runs it, and most of the land around the water is federal public land. That changes how docks work here.
On a Corps lake, private docks and shoreline use fall under the Corps’ shoreline management plan. The plan sets the rules and decides where private docks are allowed. So a property near the lake does not always come with the right to build a dock. The rules can also change from one stretch of shore to the next.
If you are buying with the lake in mind, do not assume. Ask the Corps about the shoreline rules for that spot and about any existing dock permit. A permit may not transfer with the land. The county keeps the parcel records and handles property tax, but the Corps is in charge of the shoreline.
References
Where this fits: this note belongs to Cedar County. See every local note for the county on its page.