
Boat Lifts — Lake Palestine
Boat Lifts in Lake Palestine, TX
Hydraulic and electric boat lifts that protect your vessel from the waterline year-round — installed on new docks or retrofitted to existing structures.
Boat Lifts in Lake Palestine: what to expect
Because Lake Palestine fluctuates, lift selection has to account for a moving waterline — a fixed-height cradle that's perfect at full pool can leave a boat hanging or grounded in a drawdown year. On the variable coves we often recommend systems that tolerate level change, and we size to the deeper-water reality near the Smith County dam versus the shallow upper arms.
- We match lift type to the lot's drawdown exposure rather than defaulting to one cradle.
- Capacity is set off loaded weight with margin for the wet, fouled hull a lake boat carries.
- UNRMWA footprint and the dock design are confirmed together before install.
Boat Lifts on the ground in Lake Palestine
Upper Neches River Municipal Water Authority (UNRMWA) manages permitting. Lake Palestine sees real water-level swings during drought years, which influences piling length and ramp design. Coves are long and silt-prone on the Anderson/Cherokee end — a number of our dredge jobs run there. The Smith County side runs deeper and is faster water near the dam.
Recent work near: Bullard, Flint, Coffee City, Berryville.
All Lake Palestine, TX waterfront work →What affects the price in Lake Palestine
- Boat weight and beam width (lift capacity)
- Lift type — hydraulic, electric, or manual
- Number of vessels (single or double lift system)
- Water depth and bottom conditions at the lift location
- Canopy / cover addition for sun and weather protection
Quick FAQ
Full FAQ →What size boat lift do I need?
Sizing rule of thumb: dry boat weight + 20–25% margin for fuel, gear, batteries, and motor. Then round up to the next available lift capacity.
Example: a 5,500 lb dry-weight boat needs a lift rated for ~6,500–7,000 lb of working load, so we'd quote a 7,500 lb lift. Under-sizing wears cables and seals fast — it's a false savings.
Can a boat lift be added to an existing dock?
Yes — retrofits are common. The question we answer at the site visit is whether your existing dock's framing and pilings can handle the added load.
On wood-framed docks 10+ years old, we often need to sister-up framing members or add a piling on the slip side. On metal-framed or newer wood-framed docks, retrofit is usually straightforward. We'll quote the lift and any required structural work as a single line item.
Electric vs. hydraulic lift — which is better?
Quick decision matrix:
- Electric — quieter, lower maintenance, ideal for fresh water and most residential applications up to ~15,000 lb.
- Hydraulic — stronger, smoother under load, favored for heavy boats (15,000+ lb) and commercial/marina use.
- Manual — PWCs and small craft only.
For 90% of residential lake boats, electric is the right call. Hydraulic earns its premium on heavy cruisers, wake boats with ballast, or commercial work.