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Wake-Boat Rules · Local/lake-specific rules only

Kentucky Wakesurf & Wake-Boat Rules

Kentucky has no statewide wakesurfing distance/zone rule in force. In December 2025 the Fish & Wildlife Commission advanced regulations requiring wakesports to stay 200 feet from shore and commercial docks on eligible waters and banning them elsewhere, but in early 2026 the legislature passed a bill barring KDFWR from imposing wakeboat zones or mandatory setbacks on waters where wakeboats were allowed as of Dec 1, 2025. Existing rules close a no-ski-area loophole and require PFDs; substantive limits remain waterbody-specific.

Kentucky has no statewide wakesurfing distance/zone rule in force. In December 2025 the Fish & Wildlife Commission advanced regulations requiring wakesports to stay 200 feet from shore and commercial docks on eligible waters and banning them elsewhere, but in early 2026 the legislature passed a bill barring KDFWR from imposing wakeboat zones or mandatory setbacks on waters where wakeboats were allowed as of Dec 1, 2025. Existing rules close a no-ski-area loophole and require PFDs; substantive limits remain waterbody-specific.

Wake-boat rules change often and vary by individual lake. Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources is the governing authority — confirm the current regulation before you ride. This summary is informational, not legal advice.

Source: Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources. Specifications reflect published figures and can change by model year — verify before purchase.

Frequently Asked Questions

Local/lake-specific rules only. Kentucky has no statewide wakesurfing distance/zone rule in force. In December 2025 the Fish & Wildlife Commission advanced regulations requiring wakesports to stay 200 feet from shore and commercial docks on eligible waters and banning them elsewhere, but in early 2026 the legislature passed a bill barring KDFWR from imposing wakeboat zones or mandatory setbacks on waters where wakeboats were allowed as of Dec 1, 2025. Existing rules close a no-ski-area loophole and require PFDs; substantive limits remain waterbody-specific.

Kentucky does not publish a single statewide distance-from-shore figure for wake boats — distances are set locally. Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources is the authority.