The orientation no one provides - for anyone buying, selling, owning, or building at the Lake of the Ozarks.
The Lake of the Ozarks is a 92-mile reservoir, but the legal terrain underneath it is harder to navigate than the water on top of it. A federal hydroelectric license. Four counties with four sets of rules. Flowage easements written in 1929. Shoreline regulated by Ameren Missouri under FERC Project 459. Septic systems older than the subdivisions they serve. HOA covenants that haven't been updated in decades. And one consistent truth: the buyer who treats this place like a typical residential market will be surprised at the closing table.
Written by a J.D. and longtime Lake resident, The Lake of the Ozarks Real Estate Guide walks through what you actually own when you buy lakefront, how Ameren and FERC shape every shoreline structure, what each of the four counties enforces (and doesn't), how docks are permitted and how they get lost, what septic, water, road, and HOA realities look like on the ground, what the new short-term rental rules require, and what to do when buying, selling, or building.
Inside:
Built for: buyers, sellers, owners, agents, attorneys, builders, lenders, and anyone who has wondered whether the dock at the end of their cove is actually legal.
This book is provided for general informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a Missouri-licensed attorney for your specific situation.