List of lakes of Oklahoma
The following is a list of lakes in Oklahoma located entirely (or partially, as in the case of Lake Texoma) in the state. Swimming, fishing, and/or boating are permitted in some of these lakes, but not all.
Oklahoma has more than 200 lakes created by dams. All lakes listed are man-made. Oklahoma's only natural lakes are oxbow and playa lakes. Oklahoma has sixty-two oxbow lakes at least 10 acres in size. The largest, near the Red River in McCurtain County, is 272 acres.
Playa lakes are found in saucer-shaped depressions in the high plains region. They are usually intermittent, holding water only after rains. Oklahoma has about 600 playa lakes.[1]
Lakes and reservoirs by size



Ranked by surface acres, Lake Eufaula is the 34th largest lake in the United States and Lake Texoma is the 38th largest.[2]
| Name | Capacity in acre feet (normal pool) | surface acres (normal pool) | average depth | water clarity | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lake Texoma | 2,643,000 | 88,000 acres (35,612 ha) | 30 feet (9.1 m) | average to excellent | 
| Eufaula Lake | 2,314,000 | 105,500 | 22 | poor to excellent | 
| Grand Lake o' the Cherokees | 1,515,416[3] | 41,779[3] | 36.3[3] | average to excellent | 
| Broken Bow Lake | 918,070 | 14,200 | 65 | excellent | 
| Tenkiller Ferry Lake | 654,100 | 12,900 | 51 | excellent | 
| Keystone Lake | 557,600 | 23,610 | 23 | average | 
| Oologah Lake | 553,400 | 29,640 | 19 | average | 
| Robert S. Kerr Reservoir | 525,700 | 43,800 | 12 | poor | 
| Kaw Lake | 428,600 | 17,040 | 25 | poor to average | 
| Fort Gibson Lake | 355,200 | 14,900 | 24 | good | 
| Skiatook Lake | 322,700 | 10,190 | 32 | good | 
| Sardis Lake | 274,330 | 13,610 | 20 | average | 
| Waurika Lake | 203,100 | 10,100 | 20 | average | 
| Markham Ferry Reservoir (Lake Hudson) | 200,300 | 10,900 | 18 | average | 
| Webbers Falls Lake | 170,100 | 11,600 | 15 | average | 
| Foss Reservoir | 160,145 | 8,800 | 18 | average | 
| Hugo Lake | 157,600 | 13,250 | 12 | poor | 
| Lake Murray | 153,250 | 5,728 | 27 | excellent | 
| Sooner Lake | 149,000 | 5,400 | 28 | excellent | 
| Lake Altus-Lugert | 132,830 | 6,260 | 21 | fair | 
| Atoka Lake | 125,000 | 5,700 | 22 | poor | 
| Lake Thunderbird | 119,600 | 6,070 | 20 | average | 
| McGee Creek Reservoir | 113,930 | 3,810 | 30 | excellent | 
| Canton Lake | 111,310 | 7,910 | 14 | average | 
| Tom Steed Reservoir | 109,276 | 6,400 | - | - | 
| Lake Ellsworth | 92,500 | 5,600 | 17 | fair to poor | 
| Lake Stanley Draper | 87,296 | 2,900 | 30 | good | 
| Fort Cobb Reservoir | 80,010 | 4,100 | 20 | average | 
| Lake Eucha | 79,600 | 2,860 | 28 | excellent | 
| Lake Hefner | 75,000 | 2,500 | 30 | good | 
| Lake of the Arbuckles | 72,400 | 2,350 | 31 | excellent | 
| Wister Lake | 61,423 | 7,300 | 9 | average | 
| Carl Blackwell Lake | 61,500 | 3,370 | 18 | average | 
| Lake Lawtonka | 56,574 | 2,398 | 24 | good | 
| Pine Creek Lake | 53,750 | 3,750 | 14 | good | 
| Lake W. R. Holway, formerly Chimney Rock Lake | 48,000 | 712 | 67 | excellent | 
| Copan Lake | 43,400 | 4,850 | 9 | average | 
| Lake Spavinaw | 38,000 | 1,584 | 24 | excellent | 
| Great Salt Plains Lake | 31,240 | 8,690 | 4 | poor | 
| Hulah Lake | 31,160 | 3,570 | 9 | poor | 
| Arcadia Lake | 27,520 | 1,820 | 15 | average | 
| Chouteau Reservoir | 23,840 | 2,270 | ||
| Konawa Reservoir | 23,000 | 1,350 | 17 | excellent | 
| Shawnee Twin Lake, No. l | 22,600 | 1,336 | 17 | good | 
| Fuqua Lake | 21,100 | 1,500 | 14 | average | 
| Lake McMurtry | 19,733 | 1,155 | 17 | average | 
| Birch Lake | 19,200 | 1,137 | 17 | good | 
| Bluestem Lake | 17,000 | 762 | 22 | average | 
| Dripping Springs Lake | 16,200 | 1,150 | 14 | excellent | 
| Bellcow Lake | 15,613 | 1,153 | 14 | average | 
| Lake Overholser | 13,526[4] | 1,581[4] | 16.9 max[4] | fair to poor | 
| Greenleaf Lake | 14,720 | 920 | 16 | good | 
| Lake Ponca | 14,440 | 805 | 18 | good | 
| Okmulgee Lake | 14,170 | 668 | 21 | good | 
| Wes Watkins Reservoir | 14,065 | 1,142 | 12 | good | 
| Fort Supply Lake | 13,900 | 1,820 | 8 | fair to poor | 
| Lake McAlester | 13,398 | 1,521 | 9 | average | 
| Lake R. C. Longmire | 13,162 | 918 | 14 | good | 
| Okemah Lake | 13,100 | 761 | 17 | average | 
| Elmer Thomas Lake | 12,000 | 334 | 36 | excellent | 
| Lake Humphreys | 11,900 | 840 | 14 | good | 
| Chickasha Lake | 11,480 (est) | 820 | 14 | good | 
| Holdenville Lake | 11,000 | 550 | 20 | average to good | 
Source: Oklahoma Water Atlas [2]. and [3], accessed Mar 1, 2011. Some inconsistencies exist between the two sources.
Lakes geography and administration
Lakes and reservoirs (alphabetically)

- Altus City Reservoir
 - Lake Altus-Lugert
 - American Horse Lake
 - Lake of the Arbuckles
 - Arcadia Lake
 - Ardmore City Lake
 - Atoka Lake
 - Bellcow Lake
 - Birch Lake
 - Lake Bixhoma
 - Bluestem Lake
 - Boomer Lake
 - Broken Bow Lake
 - Brushy Lake (Sallisaw, Oklahoma)[a]
 

- Lake Burtschi
 - Canton Lake
 - Carl Albert Lake
 - Lake Carl Blackwell
 - Lake Carl Etling
 - Lake Carlton
 - Carter Lake
 - Cedar Lake
 - Chandler Lake
 - Lake Checotah
 - Chickasha Lake
 - Chouteau Lock & Dam (MKARNS L&D #15)
 - Claremore Lake
 - Clayton Lake
 - Clear Creek Lake
 - Cleveland City Lake
 - Clinton Lake
 - Coalgate City Lake
 - Comanche Lake
 - Copan Lake
 - Cordell Reservoir
 - Crowder Lake
 - Cushing Municipal Lake
 - Lake Dahlgren
 - Dead Warrior Lake
 - Dripping Springs Lake
 - Lake Durant
 - Lake Ellsworth
 - Lake Elmer
 - Lake El Reno
 - Lake Eucha
 - Evans Chambers Lake
 - Foss Reservoir
 - Fort Cobb Reservoir
 - Fort Supply Lake
 - Lake Frederick
 - Fuqua Lake
 - Newt Graham Reservoir (MKARNS L&D 18)
 - Greenleaf Lake
 - Grand Lake O' the Cherokees
 - Great Salt Plains Lake
 

- Guthrie Lake
 - John Paul Hammerschmidt Lake
 - Heyburn Lake
 - Hobart Lake (a.k.a. Rocky Lake)
 - Holdenville Lake
 - Lake Hudson (formerly named Markham Ferry Reservoir)
 - Hulah Lake
 - Lake Humphreys
 - Hugo Lake
 - Lake Jean Neustadt
 - Lake Jed Johnson
 - Keystone Lake
 - Konawa Reservoir
 - Lake Lawtonka
 - Leeper Lake
 - Liberty Lake
 - Lloyd Church Lake
 - Lake Lloyd Vincent[15]
 - Lone Chimney Lake
 - W. D. Mayo Reservoir (MKARNS L&D #14)
 - Lake McAlester|McAlester Lake
 - Lake McMurtry
 - Mountain Lake
 - Lake Murray
 - Oklahoma Lake
 - Okmulgee Lake
 - Okemah Lake
 

- Oologah Lake
 - Lake Overholser
 - Ozzie Cobb Lake
 - Pine Creek Lake
 - Pauls Valley Lake
 - Ponca Lake, Ponca City lake
 - Pretty Water Lake
 - Lake R.C. Longmire
 - Raymond Gary Lake
 - Rock Creek Reservoir
 - Sahoma Lake
 - Sardis Lake
 - Shawnee Twin Lakes
 - Skiatook Lake
 - Skipout Lake
 - Sooner Lake
 - Lake Spavinaw
 - Sportsman Lake
 - Spring Creek Lake
 - Stroud Lake
 - Lake Stanley Draper
 - Tom Steed Reservoir
 - Lake Talequah
 - Elmer Thomas Lake
 - Lake Thunderbird
 - Watonga Lake
 - Waurika Lake
 - Wes Watkins
 - Lake Wayne Wallace
 - Webbers Falls Reservoir (MKARNS L&D #16)
 - Wes Watkins Reservoir
 - Wewoka Lake
 - Lake Wister
 - Lake W. R. Holway
 - Lake Yahola
 
See also
Notes
- ^ Formerly known as Brushy Creek Reservoir
 
References
- ^ digital.library.okstate.edu http://digital.library.okstate.edu/encyclopedia/entries/L/LA010.html. Retrieved March 2, 2011. 
{{cite web}}: Missing or empty|title=(help) - ^ "Search our extensive lake database". www.lakelubbers.com. Retrieved March 3, 2011.
 - ^ a b c d OWRB Hydrographic Survey of Grand Lake http://www.owrb.ok.gov/studies/reports/reports_pdf/GrandLake--hydrologicsurvey.pdf
 - ^ a b c d OWRB Lakes of Oklahoma (2015) http://www.owrb.ok.gov/news/publications/lok/lakes/Overholser.php
 - ^ "Lake Altus-Lugert, Oklahoma, USA." Accessed June 28, 2017.
 - ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Map of (Oklahoma Wildlife) Department Lakes". Archived from the original on October 7, 2010.
 - ^ "Arcadia Reservoir". Archived from the original on August 9, 2009. Retrieved January 27, 2010.
 - ^ "Birch Lake". Archived from the original on October 21, 2004. Retrieved February 5, 2010.
 - ^ "Lake Carl Blackwell | TravelOK.com - Oklahoma's Official Travel & Tourism Site". www.travelok.com.
 - ^ "Carl Blackwell Lake, Oklahoma." anglerhub. undated. Archived 2021-06-20 at the Wayback Machine Accessed May 27, 2018.
 - ^ "Cedar Lake." Archived 2016-03-30 at the Wayback Machine Accessed August 9, 2015.
 - ^ a b c Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation (ODWC). "Dripping Springs Lake 5-Year Management Plan." October 2013. Accessed February 2, 2019.
 - ^ "Lake Raymond Gary Topo Zone Map in Choctaw County OK." Topozone. Accessed May 28, 2018
 - ^ http://www.usbr.gov/projects/Project.jsp?proj_Name= Norman%20Project
 - ^ [1]- Retrieved 2019-09-23
 
External links
- Oklahoma Lakes information on TravelOK.com Official Oklahoma Tourism & Recreation Department website
 - Oklahoma Lakes
 - Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation homepage
 - Oklahoma Lake Levels
 - Oklahoma Digital Maps: Digital Collections of Oklahoma and Indian Territory