Floating vs. Fixed Dock: Which Works Better on Cumberland Reservoirs?
There is no universally right answer to floating vs. fixed. There’s only the right answer for your cove, your water, and the way you actually want to use the dock.
This is the question that comes up on almost every lakefront consultation: should the dock float, or should it sit on pilings? On Old Hickory and Percy Priest, both answers are common — and the right one comes down to a handful of site-specific factors.
How Each Type Works
Floating Docks
Floating docks rest on sealed flotation modules — usually closed-cell foam-filled HDPE billets. The dock rises and falls with the water level, held in place by pile guides, anchor cables, or stiff-arm connections to the shore. The deck surface stays at a consistent height above the water all year, regardless of pool level.
Fixed Docks
Fixed docks are built on permanent pilings driven into the lakebed. The deck is at a set elevation. As the pool rises and falls, the relationship between the deck and the water changes — in summer pool, the deck may be a foot or two above the water; in winter drawdown, that distance grows.
When Floating Wins
- Pool level moves substantially. If your cove sees real seasonal change, a floating system that follows the water beats a fixed deck that becomes a cliff at low pool.
- Deep water at the dock head. Floating docks need depth under the floats at low pool. Plenty of locations on Old Hickory and Percy Priest provide that.
- You want a consistent step-down to the boat. The distance from deck to gunwale doesn’t change — useful for loading kids, dogs, and gear.
- You’re budget-conscious on entry tier. Floating docks can be less expensive to build for simple configurations.
When Fixed Wins
- Shallow coves and narrow bays. If your slip area is shallow at low pool, floats won’t work — you need pilings.
- You want a covered dock with substantial roof. Fixed pilings handle the structural load of a heavy roof and covered slip system more easily.
- High-wake exposure. Properly engineered fixed docks shrug off wake; some floating systems can bounce in busy traffic.
- You prefer the look. Some owners simply prefer the “classic” appearance of a fixed dock on pilings.
The Hybrid Approach
Many of the best builds on these lakes mix the two. A fixed walkway off the bank to a floating section out over the slip — you get the stability and roof-load capacity of fixed construction close to shore, and the water-following performance of a floating section where it matters most.
What to Get Right Either Way
Float Sizing (If Floating)
Undersized floats are the #1 floating dock failure. The float package needs to handle the loaded weight of the dock, the lift, the boat, and a margin for additional load. Cheap floats sink the system literally and figuratively.
Piling Depth (If Fixed)
Pilings need to be driven deep enough to resist uplift, lateral movement, and freeze-thaw. Insufficient depth shows up as wobble. Wobble eventually becomes failure.
Anchor and Guide Systems
For floating docks, the anchor system is at least as important as the floats. Pile guides need to slide freely; cable anchor systems need proper tensioning and inspection.
Drawdown Range
For both types, the gangway and access system need to work at full pool and at low pool. Plan for the actual seasonal range, not just summer conditions.
How We Decide With Clients
The conversation starts at your shoreline. We walk the bank, sound the water at the slip, look at orientation (is your dock exposed to the main channel or tucked in?), evaluate wake exposure, and listen to how you’ll actually use the dock. The right answer falls out of those facts.
If anyone tells you which type to build before they’ve seen your water, find a different builder.
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.
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Cumberland Dock Pros