New Minimum-Wake Zone Posted Between Oakland Park, Sunrise Bridges

by | Feb 11, 2026 · 8:26 am | Public Safety, Fort Lauderdale | 0 comments

New Minimum-Wake Zone Posted Between Oakland Park, Sunrise Bridges

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FORT LAUDERDALE, FL (Boca Post) (Copyright © 2026) — A new slow-speed, minimum-wake zone is now in effect on a heavily traveled section of the Intracoastal Waterway in Fort Lauderdale, covering the stretch between the Oakland Park Boulevard Bridge and the Sunrise Boulevard Bridge, just west of Fort Lauderdale Beach.

The change was implemented after the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission updated the area’s signage, establishing a slow-speed corridor aimed at reducing congestion and improving safety in one of South Florida’s busiest boating zones. Boca Post previously reported in November when the slow-speed, minimum-wake zone was still being introduced as a proposed change for this stretch of the ICW.

The posted restriction applies to vessels moving through the Intracoastal between those two bridges, a short but consistently crowded run that sees routine traffic from recreational boaters, personal watercraft users, and boaters transiting north and south through Broward County’s coastal waterways. Under the new posting, operators are expected to run at slow speed while maintaining minimum wake in that zone.

Slow speed is typically understood to be roughly 5 to 9 miles per hour, though boaters should follow the posted signs and operate at the speed required to prevent creating a wake that could endanger others or damage nearby vessels and property.

Enforcement will start with a grace period. With the updated signs now installed, FWC will conduct a 30-day educational period in which officers will issue warnings for violations rather than citations. The intent, city officials said, is to give boaters time to see the new signage, understand the boundaries of the zone, and adjust how they operate through the corridor.

The City of Fort Lauderdale has been pushing for the change for months and framed the new restrictions as a practical response to ongoing public safety concerns on that stretch of waterway. City officials pointed to a fatal incident last August in which a teenager was killed while riding a personal watercraft on the Intracoastal. In the aftermath, city leaders began working on additional safety measures and backed updated speed regulation in the corridor.

The city’s Marine Advisory Board and the Fort Lauderdale Police Department also supported the speed changes, citing the need to address safety concerns in an area where high traffic and mixed vessel types can create risk, especially when operators move too fast in tight quarters.

For boaters who run that route regularly, the operational takeaway is straightforward: expect slower movement between the Oakland Park and Sunrise bridges, watch for the new minimum-wake postings, and plan extra time if you’re transiting the Intracoastal near Fort Lauderdale Beach during peak hours.

Boaters are being reminded to follow posted speed limits, stay alert, and operate with other vessels, paddlers, and shoreline users in mind. Minimum-wake zones are designed to reduce hazards created by wakes and speed differentials, and they can become a focal point for enforcement when traffic increases or conditions tighten.

What happens next is phased. The signage is up, the zone is active, and the first month will be focused on education. After that, boaters should expect enforcement to shift from warnings to citations for operators who fail to comply with the posted slow-speed, minimum-wake requirement.

Boca Post is a hyperlocal news outlet covering Boca Raton, with original reporting on city government, public safety, development, and community issues that is frequently cited across the local media landscape.

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