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Dock Electrical Done Right: GFCI, Fish Lights, and Lakefront Safety

Electrical By Cumberland Dock Pros · Updated May 2026

Electricity and water do not mix — except on a dock, where they have to. Wet-location wiring is its own discipline, and the dock outlets you see on every cove are doing a job no garage outlet is asked to do.

Dock electrical isn’t harder than other residential electrical work. It’s just less forgiving. A dropped extension cord, a corroded connection, a missing GFCI — any of them can put electricity into the water around the dock. That’s a real risk to swimmers and a real risk to you.

What Code Requires

The National Electrical Code has specific provisions for boathouses, docks, and marinas. The headlines on residential lakefront docks:

Beyond code minimums, smart dock electrical includes weather-tight covers, surge protection, and clear labeling.

The Mistakes We See Most Often

1. Indoor-Rated Outlets in Outdoor Boxes

Standard receptacles in cheap outdoor boxes don’t survive wet-location service. Spec the right outlet, the right box, the right cover — or replace it sooner than you wanted.

2. Extension Cords Run Across the Water

An orange extension cord stretched from the house to the boat is the single most common dock electrical hazard. It’s also the easiest to avoid — a properly installed dock outlet replaces a dangerous habit with a safe one.

3. Missing or Failing GFCI

GFCIs save lives. They also need to actually work. Test them monthly. Replace them at the first sign of failure to reset. A dock outlet without functioning GFCI protection is a serious problem.

4. Improper Grounding

This one’s technical but critical: the equipment grounding conductor needs to be continuous and properly terminated. Skipping or shortcutting this on a dock is exactly the kind of mistake that creates “electric shock drowning” conditions.

5. Underwater Fish Lights Installed by Homeowners

Submersible LED fish lights are popular and effective — but the power supply and grounding need to be done right. Plug-and-play kits look easy and usually are; we still see plenty wired with house-grade splices floating in waterproof tape.

What Good Dock Electrical Looks Like

A well-built dock electrical system includes:

Fish Lights, Path Lights, and Dock Lighting

The fun part. Lakefront lighting can include:

Light design transforms how the dock feels at night. It’s also one of the easiest upgrades to add to an existing dock as long as the electrical service is sized to handle it.

If You’re Not Sure About Your Existing Setup

Get it inspected. Dock electrical that was “fine” ten years ago may have corroded connections, failed GFCIs, or improperly aged hardware. An inspection is cheap. Repair is cheap. The alternative is not.

Talk to a Lakefront Specialist

Have a project on Old Hickory or Percy Priest? Get a free estimate from the Cumberland Dock Pros crew — we’ll walk your shoreline, scope the work, and handle the permits.

Request a Free Estimate

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