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Guide
Permitting is the part of shoreline work that surprises homeowners most — it usually takes longer than the construction. Here's the process in plain English. (This is general guidance, not legal advice; rules change and sites differ, so verify current requirements for your property.)
Two agencies matter for most residential projects. The state's Office of Ocean and Coastal Resource Management (OCRM) — housed within the SC Department of Environmental Services — administers the critical area permitting program for tidelands and coastal waters. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Charleston District) holds federal jurisdiction over work in navigable waters; for typical residential projects this is often coordinated through a joint process rather than a separate application odyssey.
The critical area covers coastal waters, tidelands (roughly: below the mean high water line and the adjacent marsh), and beach/dune systems. A bulkhead at the edge of a tidal creek sits in or against it almost by definition — which is why essentially all seawall, bulkhead, and riprap work needs authorization before anyone drives a pile.
General permits cover routine, lower-impact work that fits predefined conditions — often including like-for-like maintenance or replacement of an existing authorized structure within its footprint. Fastest path when your project qualifies.
Individual critical area permits are required for new structures, expansions, and anything outside general-permit conditions. These involve public notice, possible neighbor comment, and agency review of alternatives.
The oceanfront is its own world. Under South Carolina's Beachfront Management Act, new hard erosion-control structures on the beachfront are generally prohibited seaward of the setback line. If your property faces the ocean rather than an estuary, the conversation starts with what's allowed, not what's strongest. Sloped, sand-based, and soft solutions dominate there.
Plan on weeks for clean general-permit work and a few months for individual permits — and treat anything involving public comment as a season, not a month. The practical upshot: start permitting in late summer or fall and construction can land before the next hurricane season, with the tides instead of against the calendar.
Encroachment beyond the existing footprint. Unclear property/critical-area lines (get the survey right the first time). Neighbor objections — talk to them before they get a public notice in the mail. Wetland vegetation impacts. Incomplete drawings. An experienced marine contractor or agent who handles OCRM paperwork weekly will route around all five; a homeowner filing solo for the first time usually finds two of them.