Lake Marion is the largest lake in South Carolina โ roughly 110,000 acres of water shared across Orangeburg, Clarendon, Calhoun, Sumter, and Berkeley counties. It is also a managed reservoir, which means building a dock here is different from building one on a private pond or a natural lake. Before a single piling goes in, you have to understand Santee Cooper's water level management, SCDHEC's permitting rules, and how the shape of your shoreline affects what the dock can look like.
This guide walks through the entire process โ from the first phone call to the day you tie your boat to a finished dock. If you already know you want to move forward, you can request a free quote and skip to the conversation.
1. Decide What Kind of Dock You Actually Need
Most Lake Marion homeowners are choosing between three basic types:
- Fixed piling dock. Traditional pier on driven timber or concrete pilings. Best where water depth is consistent and the shoreline is stable. Long service life with pressure-treated lumber or composite decking.
- Floating dock. The decking sits on floats and rises and falls with the water. This is usually the right answer on Lake Marion because Santee Cooper manages water levels for the reservoir system โ the lake can shift several feet between high and low pool.
- Hybrid dock. A fixed walkway out to a floating section. Gives you a stable walkway and a dock that stays level with the water.
The right answer depends on your water depth, bottom conditions, boat type, and how you want to use the dock. A dock built for a pontoon that never leaves the cove is different from one built to handle a cruiser in open water.
2. Understand the Permits You Will Need
This is the part that trips up most homeowners, and the part that out-of-town contractors routinely get wrong. Every new dock on Lake Marion typically requires approval from two authorities:
- SCDHEC (South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control). Issues the Critical Area / Navigable Waters permit. Drawings, measurements, and site plans are required.
- Santee Cooper. As the operator of the Santee Cooper reservoir system (Lake Marion and Lake Moultrie), Santee Cooper has to approve structures on its water. They review dock length, slip configuration, and impact on navigation.
Depending on location, you may also need a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers review. A good marine contractor prepares and submits this package for you โ you should not be filling out agency forms on your own.
Realistic permit timeline: 3โ6 weeks for a straightforward residential dock. Complicated sites take longer. Plan for it.
3. Get a Real, Written Quote
The right way to get a quote on Lake Marion is to have the contractor come to the property. A phone quote is a guess. A quote from someone who has never seen your water depth, your shoreline, or your bottom conditions is a guess wrapped in a number.
When we visit a property, we walk the waterfront with you, measure the length you want to reach, check the depth where the boat will sit, and look at the bank for seawall or riprap needs. Then we send a written quote with the materials, dimensions, and total โ no mid-project surprises.
4. What a Dock Actually Costs on Lake Marion
Ranges are the honest answer โ every property is different. Rough 2026 bands for work on Lake Marion:
- Small floating dock, single slip, no cover: lower tens of thousands of dollars.
- Fixed piling dock, one covered slip, short walkway: mid tens of thousands.
- Piling dock with lift, covered slip, long walkway, finish touches: upper tens to low six figures.
- Commercial / community / multi-slip installations: priced per project.
Seawall work, shoreline prep, boat lifts, and electrical run separately. A quote will break each line out so you know what you are paying for.
5. Plan for Santee Cooper's Water Levels
Santee Cooper draws the lake down and raises it through the year for power generation and flood control. If your dock is designed like it would be on a private lake โ fixed height, fixed deck โ you will spend half the year walking downhill to step onto it and the other half watching your boat bang into the decking.
A properly built Lake Marion dock accounts for this. Floating sections handle the seasonal movement. Fixed sections are set at a height that works across the full range. Ladders, bumpers, and boat slips are sized for real lake conditions, not brochure conditions.
6. Materials: What Lasts on This Lake
- Pilings. Pressure-treated timber is standard. Concrete pilings last longer in the splash zone but cost more. Steel is used on commercial jobs.
- Decking. Pressure-treated lumber is affordable and can last 15โ20+ years with maintenance. Composite decking costs more but resists rot, splintering, and UV damage.
- Hardware. Hot-dip galvanized bolts, brackets, and fasteners are the minimum. Stainless is the upgrade for long-term coastal-style durability.
- Floats. Closed-cell polyethylene floats are the current standard โ UV-stable, durable, and appropriate for Santee Cooper conditions.
The cheapest package works for a while. The right package works for decades. A good contractor will show you the tradeoffs and let you pick.
7. Construction: How Long It Actually Takes
Once permits are approved and materials are staged, typical residential dock builds on Lake Marion run 1โ3 weeks of on-site work, weather-dependent. Larger piling docks with covered slips, seawall integration, or multiple lifts take longer. Commercial jobs run on their own schedule.
Total timeline from signed contract to finished dock is usually 6โ12 weeks on residential work.
8. The Walk-Through
A reputable marine contractor will walk the finished dock with you before asking for final payment. Every piling should be plumb and set to the correct depth. Every board should be secured with no spring. Every piece of hardware should be torqued and seated. If something is not right, it gets fixed before the crew leaves.
9. Who Should You Hire?
Three things matter more than price:
- They are local. A contractor based hours away cannot warranty the work in any practical sense. When a piling settles in year two, you need someone who can actually drive out and look at it.
- They have done it here before. Lake Marion has specific water, permitting, and bottom conditions. Experience elsewhere does not translate directly.
- They put it in writing. Scope, materials, price, and schedule โ before any money changes hands.
Our founder Tommy Wolpert started building docks on Lake Marion in the 1980s. Our shop is in Eutawville. We handle the whole job โ design, permits, and build โ and we are here when a question comes up after the fact.