Arkansas vs Arizona: Cost of Living, Home Prices & Military Bases (2026)
RELOCATION GUIDE · CENTRAL ARKANSAS
Arkansas vs Arizona: Cost of Living, Home Prices & Military Bases (2026)
Lower taxes, affordable homes & a growing economy. See why thousands are choosing Central Arkansas.
Arkansas vs Arizona: Overview
Arizona has become one of the most popular relocation destinations in America — driven by year-round sunshine, dry heat (preferred by many over humid climates), a booming Phoenix economy, and, until recently, relative affordability versus California. But Arizona’s prices have risen sharply: the Phoenix metro now rivals many traditionally expensive markets, and even secondary Arizona cities like Tucson and Prescott have seen substantial appreciation. For military families and retirees, a careful comparison of Arkansas and Arizona reveals a more nuanced picture than “Arizona is cheaper.”
Home Prices: Arizona’s Escalation vs Arkansas Stability
Arizona’s statewide median home price in 2026 sits at approximately $410,000–$430,000. The Phoenix metro (including Scottsdale, Chandler, Gilbert, Mesa, Tempe) runs $430,000–$700,000+ in desirable suburban communities. Tucson — home to Davis-Monthan AFB — runs $290,000–$380,000 for good single-family homes. Sierra Vista, adjacent to Fort Huachuca, runs $220,000–$310,000 — one of the more affordable Arizona military markets. Surprise and Goodyear (near Luke AFB in the west Phoenix suburbs) run $360,000–$480,000.
Central Arkansas median: $190,000–$215,000. For military families PCSing from Luke AFB (Phoenix west suburbs) to LRAFB, the difference is approximately $170,000–$270,000. Even for Tucson families (Davis-Monthan) moving to Central Arkansas, the gap is typically $80,000–$170,000. The VA loan monthly payment difference between a $400,000 Arizona loan and a $210,000 Arkansas loan is approximately $1,150/month.
Income Tax: Arizona’s Flat Rate Advantage
Arizona reformed its income tax structure significantly — the state now has a flat income tax rate of 2.5% as of 2023, one of the lowest flat rates in the country. Arkansas’s top rate is 3.9%, making Arizona the clear winner for working households on income tax. A household earning $120,000 saves approximately $2,280/year in Arizona vs Arkansas on state income tax alone. This is a real and meaningful Arizona advantage that should be acknowledged.
Military retirement pay critical note: Arizona fully exempts military retirement pay from state income tax. Arkansas also fully exempts military retirement pay. Both states are tied on this benefit — military retirees pay zero state income tax on retirement pay in either state. The income tax comparison for military retirees then becomes: Arizona’s 2.5% flat rate (on other income) vs Arkansas’s 3.9% — Arizona wins for retirees with significant non-military taxable income.
Property Taxes: Arkansas Wins Clearly
Arizona’s effective property tax rate averages approximately 0.53% — fractionally above Arkansas’s 0.61%. These are nearly identical rates on paper. But because Arizona’s home values are dramatically higher, the absolute annual property tax dollar amount is significantly larger. On a $420,000 Arizona home, taxes run approximately $2,400–$3,200/year. On a $210,000 Central Arkansas home, taxes run $1,000–$1,500. The absolute savings of $1,400–$1,700/year favor Arkansas even at equivalent rates.
Climate: Dry Heat vs Humid South
Arizona’s climate — particularly the Phoenix metro — features 300–330 sunny days per year and dry heat that many people strongly prefer to humid heat. Phoenix summers are genuinely extreme (July average high 106°F, June-September regularly exceeds 110°F) but the dry air makes it more bearable than equivalent temperatures in humid climates. Winter in Phoenix is spectacular — mild, sunny, perfect. Tucson is slightly cooler and wetter than Phoenix.
Little Rock has 217 sunny days, hot humid summers (July average high 93°F — significantly cooler than Phoenix but more humid), and mild short winters. The humidity difference is real: people who have lived in both states consistently describe Phoenix’s summer heat as more tolerable than Little Rock’s humid heat, even at higher temperatures. This is a legitimate lifestyle consideration that should factor into a comparison for families choosing between the two states.
Military: Arizona’s Dense Installation Network vs LRAFB
Arizona is one of America’s most military-dense states. Luke Air Force Base (56th Fighter Wing, F-35 pilot training) is in Glendale, west of Phoenix. Davis-Monthan AFB (355th Wing, A-10 operations) is in Tucson. Fort Huachuca (Army intelligence center) is in Sierra Vista. Marine Corps Air Station Yuma and the Yuma Proving Ground round out a major military presence. Arizona’s military community is large, well-supported, and has deep roots.
Little Rock Air Force Base — 19th Airlift Wing, C-130 training — is a smaller but tight-knit Air Force installation. For Air Force families moving between Luke AFB and LRAFB (both fighter/airlift Air Force communities), the community quality comparison is favorable. The financial environment — dramatically lower home prices in Central Arkansas — is a major consideration for families who want to build equity rather than paying $400,000+ for a Phoenix suburb home on military pay.
Who Makes the Arizona-to-Arkansas Move
Arizona-to-Arkansas relocators typically include: military families PCSing from Luke AFB, Davis-Monthan, or Fort Huachuca to LRAFB; military retirees who choose Arkansas for the lower absolute cost of living despite Arizona’s income tax advantage; remote workers priced out of Phoenix who prefer Arkansas’s humidity to continuing to afford Arizona’s home prices; and veterans who chose Arizona post-service but are now reconsidering costs as retirement income has stabilized.
Work With a Central Arkansas REALTOR®
Ashley Watters | eXp Realty | Central Arkansas specialist | VA loans & military relocations
📞 (501) 951-9200 | ✉️ [email protected] | arkansashousesearch.com
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