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Do I need a permit to remove aquatic plants from my Florida lake?

Florida's aquatic plant rules sit at the intersection of FWC, water management districts, and local code. Here's the practical version.

Mike Johnson
Mike Johnson
Founder & Lead Operator · April 2, 2026 · 6 min read
Do I need a permit to remove aquatic plants from my Florida lake?

Permitting questions are the #1 reason private Florida lake owners delay action. The rules are simpler than they look.

The three regulators that matter

  • FWC — Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission. Manages aquatic plant control on public waters and licenses commercial applicators.
  • Water Management Districts — SJRWMD (St. Johns), SWFWMD (Southwest), SFWMD (South). They permit shoreline alteration in regulated wetlands.
  • FDACS — Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services. Licenses pesticide and herbicide applicators.

Mechanical removal — usually no permit needed

If you are physically harvesting plants — cutting, raking, harvesting boat — from a private water body, no permit is required for the removal of state-listed prohibited invasives. This includes:

  • Water hyacinth
  • Water lettuce
  • Hydrilla
  • Eurasian watermilfoil
  • Salvinia (giant or common)

Herbicide application — license required

Anyone applying aquatic herbicide for hire (a commercial vendor) must hold an FDACS Aquatic Pest Control category license. A property owner applying labeled aquatic herbicide on their own pond can do so without a license — but the label restrictions are enforceable.

Native shoreline vegetation — sometimes a permit

Cutting native cattails, bulrush, eelgrass, or arrowhead in a regulated wetland or along an Outstanding Florida Water may require an Environmental Resource Permit. The riparian-rights exemption typically covers a reasonable dock-access swath but does not cover wholesale shoreline clearing.

Disposal

Harvested invasives must be disposed of where they cannot reinfest a waterway. On-site composting away from the water is fine. Transporting hyacinth or hydrilla on a public road requires a permit from FDACS — which is why most contractors haul to a permitted facility.

Practical answer

For a typical Central Florida lakefront homeowner clearing hyacinth, hydrilla, or algae from their own water: no permit, hire a licensed contractor, get the work done.

Frequently asked questions

Do I need a permit to spray weeds in my own pond in Florida?

Aquatic herbicide application requires either a licensed Aquatic Pest Control applicator or a private-applicator certification through FDACS. Homeowner over-the-counter products labeled for aquatic use can be applied by the property owner without a license, but the label is the law — read it.

Can I mechanically remove hyacinth from my private lake without a permit?

Yes. Mechanical removal of state-listed prohibited invasives (hyacinth, hydrilla, water lettuce) on a private water body does not require a permit. Disposal must be on-site or at an approved facility — you cannot transport hyacinth on public roads without a permit.

Do I need a permit to cut native cattails or eelgrass?

On most private lakes under the riparian-rights doctrine, you can clear a reasonable swath for dock access without a permit. Larger native-vegetation removals — especially in regulated wetlands or along OFW (Outstanding Florida Waters) — require a permit from the relevant water management district or the Army Corps.

Mike Johnson
About the author
Mike Johnson
Founder & Lead Operator

Founder of Aquatic Cleanup. Florida-licensed aquatic-vegetation operator working private lakes, HOA retention ponds, and waterfront properties across Volusia, Lake, Seminole, and Orange counties.

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