The Wuruma Dam is a gravity dam across the Nogo River in the upper Burnett River catchment in the North Burnett Region, Queensland, Australia. The structure also included an earth and rock-fill embankment saddle dam. Located north-west of and completed in 1969 at a cost of , the resultant reservoir, Lake Wuruma, supplies water for irrigation and town use for Eidsvold, and .
The dam wall is of mass concrete gravity construction and is high and long. The saddle dam is high and its embankment is long. The reservoir has capacity of when full and covers , that is drawn from a catchment area of . The uncontrolled spillway comprises a concrete ogee crest that can handle .
The dam takes its name from a local Indigenous word meaning brahminy kite.
After reaching a low of 0.03% in September 1970, Wuruma Dam overflowed for the first time in February 1971. It recorded its highest level of 142.64% capacity ( over the spillway) in January 2013 as a result of heavy rains from ex-Tropical Cyclone Oswald.
In 2008 Sunwater commenced a dam spillway capacity upgrade program that included Wuruma Dam.
A Stocked Impoundment Permit is required to fish in the dam.