Arkansas vs Nebraska: Cost of Living, Home Prices & Military Bases (2026)

Quick Answer: Arkansas beats Nebraska on income tax (4.4% vs Nebraska’s top rate of 5.84%), home prices ($199K vs $245K), and climate (Central Arkansas winters are dramatically milder). Nebraska wins on flat terrain appeal and the Omaha/STRATCOM military community. The decisive factor for military retirees: Arkansas fully exempts military retirement pay from state income tax; Nebraska does not — creating $2,200–$2,900/year in annual tax savings for a typical retired E-8 choosing Arkansas. Contact Ashley Watters at (501) 951-9200.

Arkansas vs Nebraska: Overview

Nebraska is one of America’s archetypal Great Plains states — flat, agricultural, conservative, and home to one of the country’s most strategically important military installations in Offutt Air Force Base (home of US Strategic Command). Like Arkansas, Nebraska is affordable by national standards, but several key differences — income tax treatment of military retirement pay, climate severity, and natural beauty — make Central Arkansas a compelling alternative for military families evaluating retirement or relocation options.

Home Prices: Arkansas More Affordable

Nebraska’s statewide median home price runs approximately $240,000–$255,000 — above Arkansas’s $190,000–$215,000. The Omaha metro runs $265,000–$360,000; Lincoln (state capital) runs $230,000–$310,000; and the Bellevue area adjacent to Offutt AFB runs $215,000–$300,000. Rural Nebraska is more affordable ($150,000–$210,000) but offers limited amenities.

Central Arkansas at $190,000–$215,000 is below Bellevue/Offutt market prices and well below Omaha. For VA loan buyers, the difference translates directly into lower monthly payments — or more home for the same loan amount.

Income Tax: Nebraska vs Arkansas — Military Retirement Distinction

Nebraska has a graduated income tax with a top rate of 5.84% — higher than Arkansas’s 4.4%. Nebraska has been working to reduce its income tax burden in recent years, but the current top rate remains meaningfully above Arkansas. For a household earning $100,000, the annual difference is approximately $1,400–$2,200 in state income taxes favoring Arkansas.

The critical military distinction: Nebraska taxes military retirement pay. Arkansas fully exempts military retirement pay from state income tax. For a retired E-8 drawing $38,400/year in retirement pay, Nebraska’s tax on that income runs approximately $2,200–$2,900/year. Arkansas tax: zero. Over a 20-year retirement, this is $44,000–$58,000 in cumulative tax savings — just on the retirement pay — for choosing Arkansas over Nebraska.

Nebraska does offer a partial exemption for military retirement pay that has been expanding, with full exemption phasing in over multiple years. However, as of 2026, a portion of military retirement pay remains taxable in Nebraska, while Arkansas has offered full exemption for years.

Property Taxes: Nebraska Significantly Higher

Nebraska has one of the country’s higher property tax rates at approximately 1.63% effective rate — nearly three times Arkansas’s 0.61%. On a $245,000 Nebraska home, annual property taxes run $3,500–$4,300. On a $215,000 Arkansas home: $1,000–$1,500. The annual savings of $2,500–$3,000 is significant — adding another $50,000–$60,000 over a 20-year retirement in Arkansas’s favor.

Military: Offutt AFB vs LRAFB

Offutt Air Force Base in Bellevue, Nebraska is one of the most strategically significant installations in the US military. It is home to US Strategic Command (USSTRATCOM) — the command responsible for America’s nuclear deterrence, space operations, cyberspace, and strategic missile defense. Offutt is also home to the Air Force Weather Agency, various intelligence units, and the E-4B “Nightwatch” aircraft (the Airborne Command Post). It is a prestigious, mission-critical assignment that attracts senior officers and NCOs.

Little Rock Air Force Base in Jacksonville AR hosts the 19th Airlift Wing — the Air Force’s largest C-130 training center. Personnel rotating between Offutt and LRAFB represent a common within-Air Force PCS path. STRATCOM retirees who evaluate Arkansas for retirement find a state with dramatically lower property taxes, full military retirement pay exemption, and a strong VA healthcare network in Little Rock.

Climate: Nebraska Winters vs Arkansas

Nebraska winters are genuine Great Plains cold — Omaha averages January highs of 32°F, with wind chills frequently well below zero and blizzards that shut down the region for days. The heating season runs October through April. Spring arrives late; fall can be brief. Central Arkansas by comparison averages January highs of 50°F with occasional light snow and a dramatically shorter heating season. For retiring service members who’ve done tours in Alaska, Europe, Korea, and other cold postings and no longer have to be there — Arkansas’s mild winters are a genuine quality-of-life upgrade.

Natural Beauty: Ozarks vs Prairie

Nebraska has the unique Sandhills, the Platte River valley (home to the world’s largest sandhill crane migration), and Chimney Rock — genuinely interesting but largely flat and prairie-based. Arkansas offers the Ozark Mountains, Ouachita Mountains, Buffalo National River, Lake Ouachita, Crater of Diamonds State Park, and Hot Springs National Park — a dramatically more diverse natural environment with more outdoor recreation variety per square mile than almost any other state.

Relocating from Nebraska to Central Arkansas

Nebraska-to-Arkansas moves typically involve: Offutt AFB retirees who want to maximize retirement income through Arkansas’s tax exemption; STRATCOM military families PCSing to LRAFB; remote workers and federal employees no longer needing Omaha proximity; and families escaping Nebraska winters and high property taxes who find Arkansas offers comparable community quality at significantly lower total cost.

Work With a Central Arkansas REALTOR®

Ashley Watters | eXp Realty | Central Arkansas specialist | VA loans & relocations
📞 (501) 951-9200 | ✉️ [email protected] | arkansashousesearch.com

More State Comparisons: Arkansas vs Kansas | Arkansas vs Iowa | Arkansas vs Missouri | Arkansas vs Oklahoma | Arkansas vs Colorado | AR Relocation Guide
State Comparison: Arkansas vs Alabama — both fully exempt military retirement pay, similar home prices, Arkansas lower income tax (4.4% vs 5%), Alabama lower property taxes — Redstone/Maxwell/Fort Novosel vs LRAFB.
State Comparison: Arkansas vs Mississippi — both fully exempt military retirement pay, MS wins on lowest home prices in US, AR wins on economy/healthcare/schools — Columbus AFB/Keesler vs LRAFB.
State Comparison: Arkansas vs Montana — home prices ($199K vs $430K), Malmstrom AFB (STRATCOM ICBMs) vs LRAFB, Montana’s 6.75% income tax vs AR’s 4.4%, no military retirement pay exemption in MT, and dramatic winter climate difference.
State Comparison: Arkansas vs Idaho — home prices ($199K vs $385K), Mountain Home AFB (F-15E) vs LRAFB, Idaho’s 5.8% flat income tax vs AR’s 4.4%, and metro access at LRAFB vs rural isolation at MHAFB.
State Comparison: Arkansas vs Wyoming — home prices ($199K vs $370K), Wyoming’s zero income tax vs AR’s 4.4%, F.E. Warren AFB (90th Missile Wing/ICBMs) vs LRAFB, and Cheyenne’s brutal high-plains winters vs Central Arkansas’s mild climate.
State Comparison: Arkansas vs North Dakota — Minot AFB (“Frozen Chosen” — B-52s & Minuteman III ICBMs), ND’s zero income tax vs AR’s 4.4%, January highs of 10°F in Minot vs 50°F in Little Rock, and home prices ($199K vs $250K).
State Comparison: Arkansas vs Alaska — JBER (F-22) & Eielson AFB (F-35A) vs LRAFB, Alaska’s zero income tax + Permanent Fund dividend, Anchorage homes ($380K+) vs Central Arkansas ($199K), and extreme Interior Alaska winters.
State Comparison: Arkansas vs Washington State — JBLM (I Corps, C-17s) vs LRAFB, WA’s zero income tax vs AR’s 4.4%, Pierce County homes ($480K+) vs Central Arkansas ($199K), and 8 months of Pacific Northwest gray vs AR sunshine.
State Comparison: Arkansas vs Hawaii — Oahu homes ($800K–$1M+) vs Central Arkansas ($199K), Hawaii’s 11% income tax & military retirement pay tax vs AR’s full exemption, and JBPHH/Schofield vs LRAFB.
State Comparison: Arkansas vs South Dakota — Ellsworth AFB (B-21 Raider stealth bomber) vs LRAFB, SD’s zero income tax vs AR’s 4.4%, Rapid City homes ($295K) vs Central Arkansas ($199K), and SD’s higher property taxes.
State Comparison: Arkansas vs Kentucky — Fort Campbell (101st Airborne, Night Stalkers) vs LRAFB, Kentucky’s partial military retirement pay tax vs AR’s full exemption, home prices ($199K vs $235K), and cost of living edge for Arkansas.
State Comparison: Arkansas vs Louisiana — Barksdale AFB (B-52H) & Fort Johnson (JRTC) vs LRAFB, AR’s full military retirement pay exemption vs LA’s $6K partial exemption, and no hurricane/flood insurance burden in Arkansas.
State Comparison: Arkansas vs Connecticut — Sub Base New London (world’s largest submarine base) vs LRAFB, CT’s 5% income tax & partial military retirement pay exemption vs AR’s full exemption, and Groton homes ($370K) vs Central Arkansas ($199K).
State Comparison: Arkansas vs Massachusetts — home prices ($199K vs $600K+), no military retirement tax exemption in MA, and Boston-area cost shock vs Central Arkansas affordability.
State Comparison: Arkansas vs Delaware — home prices ($199K vs $345K), Dover AFB’s 436th Airlift Wing vs LRAFB, and why military retirees choose Arkansas over the Mid-Atlantic.
State Comparison: Arkansas vs West Virginia — both budget-friendly states, but Arkansas wins on economy, job growth, LRAFB military community, and long-term property value.
State Comparison: Arkansas vs Rhode Island — home prices ($199K vs $430K), Naval Station Newport vs LRAFB, and no military retirement tax exemption in RI.
State Comparison: Arkansas vs Maine — home prices ($199K vs $380K), Portsmouth Naval Shipyard vs LRAFB, and ME’s 7.15% income tax vs AR’s 4.4%.
State Comparison: Arkansas vs Vermont — home prices ($199K vs $390K), VT’s 8.75% income tax (highest in this series), no military retirement exemption, vs Central Arkansas affordability.
State Comparison: Arkansas vs New Hampshire — home prices ($199K vs $470K), Pease ANGB 157th ARW KC-46A vs LRAFB, and NH’s 1.86% property tax (2nd highest nationally) vs AR’s 0.61%.
Your Agent: Ashley Watters — Central Arkansas REALTOR®, military spouse, VA loan specialist, and PCS relocation expert. Call (501) 951-9200.
LRAFB Communities Guide: Jacksonville | Cabot | Sherwood | Conway | Benton/Bryant — neighborhood guides for every major LRAFB commuter community.