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Dock Rights and Lake Access in Indiana — A Complete Guide for Buyers
Lake Buyer Guide
Lake Shafer & Freeman, White County
Lake Shafer & Freeman, White County
Dock Rights and Lake Access in Indiana — A Complete Guide for Buyers
What Indiana buyers need to know about dock rights, riparian rights, Indiana DNR lake regulations, Indiana American Water dock permits on Lake Shafer and Lake Freeman, shared vs private access, and what to verify in title and due diligence before closing.
Michael Sims & Ryan Clemons
Co-Chairmen & Founders · Redlow Group
Published • Updated
Quick Answer
What are dock rights on Indiana lakes like Lake Shafer and Lake Freeman?
Dock rights on Lake Shafer and Lake Freeman in Indiana are governed by permits issued by Indiana American Water — the utility company that operates the dams creating both lakes. Specifically, Indiana American Water controls the water and the shoreline easement on which dock structures sit. A property having water frontage does not automatically convey an active dock permit. Furthermore, riparian rights in Indiana give waterfront landowners certain use rights along the shoreline, but dock construction and placement are separately regulated. Buyers must verify permit status, transferability, and covered structures for every lakefront purchase on these two lakes before closing.
📞 Ask Redlow Group to Help Verify Dock Rights Before You Offer
Dock rights are one of the most commonly misunderstood issues in White County lake real estate. Buyers from non-lake markets often assume that water frontage automatically includes full dock rights. Specifically, on Lake Shafer and Lake Freeman, that assumption can be costly. This guide explains how the system actually works so buyers can ask the right questions before making any offer.

How Lake Shafer and Lake Freeman Were Created
Lake Origin
Both Lake Shafer and Lake Freeman are man-made reservoirs created by dams on the Tippecanoe River. Specifically, Oakdale Dam creates Lake Shafer to the south and Norway Dam creates Lake Freeman to the north. Both dams — and therefore both lakes — are operated by Indiana American Water.
Furthermore, because Indiana American Water created and maintains the impoundments, the company controls a shoreline easement that surrounds both lakes. This easement is the legal basis for Indiana American Water’s authority to regulate dock permits. Specifically, dock structures on either lake are placed on or adjacent to Indiana American Water’s easement — not simply on the adjacent landowner’s property.
Therefore, buyers cannot rely solely on property deeds and plat maps to understand what dock rights come with a lakefront property. Indiana American Water’s permit records are a separate and essential part of due diligence on any Lake Shafer or Lake Freeman purchase.
Indiana American Water Dock Permits — What They Cover
Permit System
Indiana American Water issues dock permits for structures placed on its shoreline easement on Lake Shafer and Lake Freeman. Specifically, permits govern the type of structure, its dimensions, placement position, and any additional elements such as boat lifts, wave runner ramps, and covered boathouse components. Furthermore, permits are issued to individual property owners — not to properties themselves.
This distinction matters significantly for buyers. Specifically, when a property transfers to a new owner, the dock permit does not automatically transfer. Additionally, some permits require affirmative action to transfer — including application to Indiana American Water, payment of transfer fees, and in some cases, re-inspection of the structure. Moreover, if a seller removes the dock before closing and surrenders the permit, the new owner may not be able to obtain a new permit for the same position.
Therefore, buyers should require the seller to provide documentation of the current permit — including its status, expiration date, covered structures, and transferability terms — as a condition of the purchase contract. Furthermore, buyers should contact Indiana American Water directly during due diligence to verify the permit details independently.
Riparian Rights in Indiana — What They Mean for Lake Buyers
Riparian Rights
Riparian rights are the property rights associated with owning land adjacent to a body of water. Specifically, in Indiana, riparian landowners have the right to make reasonable use of the water adjacent to their property — including swimming, fishing, and boat access — as long as that use does not unreasonably interfere with other riparian owners’ rights.
Furthermore, riparian rights in Indiana are tied to ownership of the shoreline land. A buyer who purchases a waterfront lot on Lake Shafer or Lake Freeman holds riparian rights as part of the property. Additionally, the specific extent of those rights — including whether they include the right to construct and maintain a dock — depends on both Indiana law and the regulatory overlay of Indiana American Water’s permit system.
Moreover, riparian rights do not automatically override Indiana American Water’s permit requirements. In other words, a buyer has riparian rights as a waterfront owner AND must separately obtain and maintain an Indiana American Water dock permit to legally place a dock on the shoreline. Both elements are required. For official guidance on Indiana’s public trust doctrine and riparian rights, the Indiana DNR provides regulatory context for lake use across the state.
Shared vs Private Lake Access — Key Differences
Access Types
Not every property marketed with “lake access” or “near the lake” provides direct private waterfront. Specifically, some properties access Lake Shafer or Lake Freeman through a shared access easement — a common parcel or right-of-way that a group of property owners use collectively. Furthermore, shared access arrangements vary significantly in terms of what is permitted, who maintains the access point, and what structures — if any — are allowed at the shared access location.
Additionally, some neighborhoods were developed with a community boat ramp or dock area shared among all lot owners in the plat. In those cases, individual lot owners do not have private waterfront frontage. Moreover, shared access limitations can significantly affect both property value and usability compared to properties with direct private frontage and individual dock permits.
Therefore, buyers should specifically ask whether access is direct private frontage or through a shared easement — and request documentation of the easement terms, maintenance responsibilities, and permitted uses at the shared access point. Specifically, this distinction should appear in the title commitment and the legal property description. For broader due diligence context on lake purchases, see our lakefront home buying guide and our lake property inspection checklist.
What to Verify in Title and Due Diligence
Due Diligence Checklist
Before closing on any Lake Shafer or Lake Freeman property, buyers should complete the following dock and access verifications. First, confirm with Indiana American Water that an active dock permit exists for the property and that it is transferable to the new owner. Second, obtain the permit documentation showing what structures are covered, their dimensions, and any conditions.
Third, confirm whether the dock and all ancillary structures — lifts, ramps, boathouse components — are included in the sale or excluded. Fourth, review the title commitment for easements and encumbrances affecting the shoreline or access. Fifth, verify with the seller whether any access is shared or private and request easement documentation for shared arrangements.
Furthermore, buyers whose purchase includes investment use — rental income, subletting of dock access — should verify whether the Indiana American Water permit allows any commercial use of the dock facilities. Additionally, structural condition of the dock itself should be evaluated as part of the property inspection. Specifically, dock condition directly affects both usability and the cost of deferred maintenance the buyer inherits at closing.
Dock Rights Due Diligence — Quick Checklist
- Active Indiana American Water dock permit confirmed
- Permit is transferable to new owner
- All covered structures identified and documented
- Dock included vs excluded in sale — confirmed in contract
- Title shows no conflicting easements on shoreline
- Shared vs private access confirmed and documented
- Dock structural condition evaluated by inspector
Frequently Asked Questions — Dock Rights and Lake Access Indiana
Buying on Lake Shafer or Lake Freeman? Let Redlow Group Guide You.
Dock rights and lake access issues are where uninformed buyers lose money after closing. Redlow Group knows the permit system, the title issues, and the questions to ask before every lake offer goes in.
Dock rights on Lake Shafer and Lake Freeman are governed by permits issued by Indiana American Water — the utility company that operates the dams on the Tippecanoe River that created both lakes. A property having water frontage does not automatically include an active, transferable dock permit. Furthermore, riparian rights give waterfront owners certain use rights along the shoreline, but dock construction requires a separate Indiana American Water permit. Buyers must verify permit status and transferability directly with Indiana American Water, confirm whether access is private or shared, and review title easements during due diligence. Specifically, dock permit issues that are discovered after closing are far more expensive and difficult to resolve than those caught before the offer is finalized.
Dock rights are not assumed. They are verified — before you close, not after.
Redlow Group
Your Lake Shafer & Lake Freeman Real Estate Experts · redlowgroup.com
