Michigan Porch

Porch Notes

Buying on (or near) a Barry County lake?

Home and property

barry county lakes special assessments

Barry County is lake-and-woods country — dotted with lakes and ringed by state forest, with the big one, Gun Lake, sitting next to the Yankee Springs Recreation Area in the west of the county. Gull Lake, Thornapple Lake, and dozens of smaller lakes are scattered all around. If you’re buying a place on the water, a few things are worth knowing.

Most of the larger lakes here have a “legal lake level” — a normal height that was set by a judge in court, and that the lake is supposed to stay at. The Barry County Drain Commissioner maintains and monitors those levels, usually with a dam or control structure at the lake’s outlet. That’s what keeps the water steady from one season to the next.

Keeping a lake healthy costs money — the level controls, plus weed and algae treatment — and the people who benefit from the lake usually pay for it. So the waterfront and lake-access homes on a given lake are often grouped into a special assessment district, and you’ll pay a yearly lake assessment on top of your regular property taxes. Before you buy, ask what that assessment is and what it covers; it varies a lot from one lake to the next.

Two more things to check. Many of these lakes have an active lake association — usually worth joining, since they’re the people keeping an eye on the water. And the boating rules aren’t the same everywhere: a number of Barry County lakes, and the channels that connect them, have “slow — no wake” zones, and some have other local rules. The Drain Commissioner’s office and your lake association can tell you exactly what applies to your stretch of water.

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