Dallas White Park
🌊 Cocoplum Waterway
📍 North Port, FL
View Details →Discover 1,647 public boat launches, ramps, and marina access points throughout Florida. Find the perfect launch site for your next boating adventure.
Florida has more boat ramps than any other state, which makes sense given that water is essentially everywhere. The challenge isn't finding a ramp, it's understanding which ramp suits your boat, your destination, and the water conditions you're dealing with that day.
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission manages a large network of public ramps, and most are free or low cost with a current registration. County-managed ramps vary more in quality and fee structure. In South Florida, especially Miami-Dade and Broward, ramp congestion on weekends is genuinely bad. Getting to a popular ramp at 10am on a Saturday in summer is a mistake you'll only make once.
The Gulf Coast and Atlantic Coast offer completely different boating environments. The Gulf side, particularly from Tampa Bay south, has flatter water more of the time, extensive grass flats for shallow-water fishing, and generally more forgiving conditions for smaller boats. The Atlantic side is more exposed and conditions build faster. The Keys are their own category entirely, where knowing the water depth by GPS is standard practice because you will find shallow patches that aren't marked.
Florida also has a serious aquatic vegetation issue in many inland lakes and rivers. Hydrilla and other invasive plants clog some launches and require careful prop management in shallow areas. Lake Okeechobee has this problem extensively in certain areas.
Manatee awareness is legally required, not optional. Speed zones in certain areas carry real fines, and the "idle speed, no wake" zones near coastal areas exist year-round in many places.
Summer afternoon thunderstorms in Florida are among the most intense in North America. The rule is simple: if you can hear thunder, get off the water immediately and stay off it for 30 minutes after the last strike.
Discover the best boat ramps, popular water bodies, boating regulations, and essential information for Florida.
Read the Full Guide →🌊 Cocoplum Waterway
📍 North Port, FL
View Details →🌊 Lake Martin
📍 Parker, FL
View Details →🌊 Withlacoochee River - Silver Lake
📍 Hernando County, FL
View Details →🌊 St. Johns River - Trout River
📍 Jacksonville, FL
View Details →🌊 St. Johns River
📍 Mullet Lake Park, FL
View Details →🌊 Trout Creek
📍 Franklin County, FL
View Details →Florida offers excellent boating opportunities with 1,647 boat ramps across the state. Whether you're looking to launch on lakes, rivers, or coastal waters, our directory helps you find the perfect access point for your watercraft.
When selecting a boat ramp in Florida, consider these factors:
Browse our complete directory of boat ramps in Florida below. Use the filters to narrow your search by county or specific features you need.