Lake Access Sites & Permits

boat launche_s

Lake Access Permit

The Lake Access Permit is a year-round permit required for the use of all designated launch sites for motorized and non-motorized boats, canoes, & kayaks in the city of Madison, city of Monona, and Dane County Parks. Permits are valid for the issue year through March 31 of the following year and must be displayed on the

inside driver’s side windshield. 

Online registration is available for Lake Access Annual Permits.  

Annual launch permits (valid at all Dane County, City of Madison, and City of Monona launch sites) are available at Monona City Hall, Monona Parks and Recreation Department Office, West Marine. Daily launch permits are also available at each site.

Boat Launch Permit Fees

  • Dane County Resident Annual Pass - $50
  • Dane County Senior Citizen (65+) Annual Pass - $25
  • Non Dane County Resident Annual Pass - $60
  • Senior Citizen Non Dane County (65+) Annual Pass - $30
  • Disabled Annual Pass - $25
  • Duplicate / Replacement - $20
  • Daily Lake Access Pass Paid at Launch - $8
  • Non-Motorized (Canoe/Kayak) Daily Access Pass Paid at Launch - $7

Related Resources

Aquatic Invasive Species (AIS) Prevention

If you store your watercraft with us, please be sure to review our AIS information to help us prevent the spread of AIS.

  1. What is AIS
  2. Why is AIS a Problem
  3. What Can I Do

Aquatic Invasive Species (AIS) are invasive plants that live on, in or near water or invasive animals that require a watery habitat. Invasive species share the following characteristics:

  1. They are not native to the ecosystem. Some species may be native to the United States, but not Wisconsin; some could even be native to one part of the state, but not another.
  2. Invasive species cause economic and/or ecological harm. They can over crowd native species.
  3. They often spread quickly because of reproduction and/or a lack of predators; in their native habitats, invasive species probably have predators keeping their numbers in check, but in their invaded habitat, there's often nothing to eat them and stop their spread.