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LakeQuality

Reservoirs in Wisconsin

49 of 130 graded Wisconsin lakes (38%) are man-made reservoirs in the USACE National Inventory of Dams. 47 carry a High or Significant hazard rating.

Why these Wisconsin reservoirs were built

22
Recreation
11
Water Supply
10
Flood Risk Reduction
1
Fish and Wildlife Pond
1
Other
49
Total reservoirs
15,839
Total surface acres
239,294
Normal storage (ac-ft)
47
High or Significant hazard

All 49 Wisconsin reservoirs (by surface area)

ReservoirCountyGradeSurface areaYear builtPurposeHazard
Wmi-06 LakeMiamiF3,200 ac1967Flood Risk ReductionHigh
Lake LemonMonroeF1,650 ac1952Water SupplyHigh
Wti-13 LakeCarrollD1,547 ac1925RecreationHigh
Wwu-11 LakeMarionC1,350 ac1967Flood Risk ReductionHigh
Wuw-13 LakeHuntingtonF900 ac1968Flood Risk ReductionHigh
Wed-01 LakeHenryA815 ac1981RecreationHigh
Webster LakeKosciuskoD774 ac1835RecreationHigh
Wel-11 LakeMartinF621.9 ac1971Flood Risk ReductionHigh
Lake GeorgeSteubenB537.95 ac1927RecreationHigh
Lej-08 LakeAllenD460 ac1953Water SupplyHigh
Umk-01 LakeSt. JosephD345 ac1977RecreationHigh
Koontz LakeStarkeD324.43 ac1849RecreationHigh
Waw-01 LakeHowardF322 ac1957High
Wwe-02 LakePutnamD300.65 ac1976Flood Risk ReductionHigh
Oml-05 LakeRipleyC211 ac1956Water SupplyHigh
Wel-01 LakeWashingtonA210 ac1969Water SupplyHigh
Oml-05 LakeRipleyF205 ac1959Water SupplyHigh
Osk-07 LakeClarkB183.18 ac1964High
Wpa-04 LakeDuboisC180 ac1966High
Wem-04 LakeJenningsF175 ac1953RecreationHigh
Gmw-07 LakeWayneF174 ac1963Water SupplyHigh
Wed-01 LakeHenryC173 ac1974Water SupplySignificant
Wsu-06 LakeMontgomeryF167 ac1964RecreationSignificant
Wwl-01 LakeMonroeC105.67 ac1924RecreationHigh
Wlv180 LakeParkeF99.46 ac1971Flood Risk ReductionHigh
Wwl-10 LakePikeF90 ac1970Flood Risk ReductionHigh
Obs-07 LakeWashingtonF86 ac1947Water SupplyHigh
Wem-09 LakeWashingtonA86 ac1974Flood Risk ReductionSignificant
Lmj-16 LakeNobleC84 ac1979RecreationSignificant
Olp-10 LakeWarrickD60 ac1935RecreationSignificant
Lamb LakeJohnsonC56.3 ac1937RecreationHigh
Lmg-03 LakePorterB49.72 ac1940Water SupplyHigh
Wem-08 LakeWashingtonA48 ac1962Flood Risk ReductionSignificant
Olp-09 LakeSpencerF39 ac1957RecreationHigh
Obs-06 LakeHarrisonB29 ac1971Flood Risk ReductionSignificant
Olp-09 LakeDuboisF24 ac1957Significant
Wuw-06 LakeWellsF23.5 ac1931RecreationSignificant
Gmw-04 LakeFayetteF21.4 ac1939RecreationSignificant
Wpa-03 LakeDuboisC21 ac1915Water SupplySignificant
Wpa-07 LakeGibsonC16 ac1930Water SupplyLow
Wem-07 LakeJenningsF15.5 ac1937RecreationSignificant
Wbu-06 LakeVigoC14 ac1930RecreationHigh
Olp-04 LakeDuboisF9.8 ac1963OtherSignificant
Obs-09 LakeCrawfordD9.68 ac1950RecreationLow
Wwu-17 LakeMonroeB8.19 ac1940RecreationHigh
Wem-09 LakeJacksonB6.49 ac1940RecreationHigh
Wbu-19 LakeKnoxF5.36 ac1963RecreationSignificant
Lmj-17 LakeKosciuskoC2.72 ac1962Fish and Wildlife PondHigh
Wwu180 LakeMonroeB2.57 ac1940RecreationSignificant

Frequently Asked Questions

How many reservoirs are in Wisconsin?

49 of 130 graded Wisconsin lakes (38%) are man-made reservoirs in the USACE National Inventory of Dams. 47 are rated High or Significant hazard, meaning failure would put downstream lives or property at substantial risk. The oldest matched dam dates to 1835.

What's the largest reservoir in Wisconsin?

The largest matched reservoir in Wisconsin is Wmi-06 Lake in Miami County at 3,200 acres of normal surface area, impounded by the Mississinewa Dam (completed 1967).

What's the difference between a reservoir and a natural lake?

A reservoir is a body of water impounded by a man-made dam — typically built for flood control, hydroelectric power, water supply, irrigation, or recreation. A natural lake formed without human intervention, usually from glacial scouring, volcanic activity, or river meandering. Reservoirs typically have shoreline that fluctuates with seasonal water level management, while natural lakes have more stable shorelines. The USACE National Inventory of Dams classifies every regulated dam in the United States, which is how we identify which LakeGrade lakes are actually reservoirs.

What does the hazard class mean?

USACE assigns each dam a hazard potential classification based on what would happen downstream if the dam failed — NOT how likely the dam is to fail. "Low" hazard means dam failure would cause no probable loss of life and only low economic loss. "Significant" means probable loss of life is unlikely but appreciable economic damage would occur. "High" means probable loss of life and significant economic damage. The classification is about consequence, not condition. Many High-hazard dams are perfectly safe; they're rated High because populated areas have grown downstream over time.

Where does this reservoir data come from?

Every reservoir record on this page is matched to the USACE National Inventory of Dams (NID), the federal database of all dams ≥25 ft tall or impounding ≥50 acre-feet, plus any dam that poses a Significant or High hazard regardless of size. The NID is published by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and updated annually. Surface area, storage capacity, dam height, and hazard classification come directly from NID records.

Data source

Reservoir data from the USACE National Inventory of Dams (NID), the federal database of all regulated dams. Dam attributes (height, year completed, storage capacity, hazard class) are matched to LakeGrade lakes by proximity and dam-name similarity. Some lakes may be reservoirs that aren't matched if the dam record uses a name substantially different from our lake name.