The Belize Real Estate Insider
Starting a new series on one of the most misunderstood aspects of Belize real estate — docks and waterway reserves. If you're buying waterfront property, this is essential knowledge. What Is the 66-Foot Reserve? * Under Belizean law, a 66-foot reserve exists along ALL coastlines, rivers, and waterways * Measured from the high water mark inland * This is national land — sometimes called "Queen's Land" or "King's Land" * Meant to remain accessible to the public * Established in the National Lands Act, Section 6 Key Reality Check * If you buy beachfront property, you don't own the beach * The first 66 feet from high water line is public reserve * Your titled property typically begins AFTER that 66-foot zone * Applies to: ocean beaches, lagoons, rivers, creeks — any body of water Can the Public Walk on "Your" Beach? * Legally, yes — the reserve ensures public access * Enforcement varies by area * You can maintain it like an extension of your yard, but you can't block it off * Area Representative Andre Perez: "Buying waterfront property does not guarantee you will be building a dock or privatizing the beach" What Can Property Owners Do in the Reserve? * Limited activities WITH permission only * Cannot build permanent structures without government approval * Cannot fence it off to exclude the public * Cannot claim it as private property * Can apply for permission for specific purposes (dock, seawall) through Ministry of Natural Resources The Seabed * The seabed (land under the water) belongs to the government * Building a dock means building on government-owned seabed * Permission required with conditions attached How This Affects Property Value * Waterfront is still valuable — views, access, lifestyle * But buyers need realistic expectations * You're buying property ADJACENT to water, not ownership of water or beach * Properties with existing permitted docks may command premiums Questions to Ask When Buying Waterfront * Where exactly does titled property begin relative to water? * Is there an existing dock? Is it properly permitted? * What's the history of public access in that area? * Any pending disputes about the reserve? * Has seller made representations about beach/water rights that may not be accurate? Tomorrow: The dock permit process — what it takes to actually build a dock in Belize. Email David at david@thedavidkafka.com]]>
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