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

Quick Answer: Arkansas beats New Mexico on home prices (median ~$199K vs NM’s ~$265K), overall cost of living, and significantly lower income tax rate (4.4% vs NM’s top rate of 5.9%). New Mexico wins on desert scenery, ski access, and mild dry summers. For military families at Kirtland AFB, Holloman AFB, or White Sands Missile Range considering retirement or relocation, Central Arkansas offers more home value, lower taxes on military retirement pay, and a strong VA healthcare network in Little Rock. Contact Ashley Watters at (501) 951-9200.

Arkansas vs New Mexico: Overview

New Mexico is a unique state — high desert landscape, rich Native American and Hispanic heritage, Albuquerque’s technology corridor, and a significant military and federal government presence. But New Mexico also has persistent economic challenges: it ranks among the lower states for income, school quality, and economic opportunity. For military families stationed at one of NM’s major installations, the question of where to retire or PCS next often comes down to quality of life vs. cost of living — and Central Arkansas competes strongly on both.

Home Prices: Arkansas vs New Mexico

New Mexico’s statewide median home price has risen to approximately $260,000–$275,000, driven by the Santa Fe ($500,000–$800,000+) and Taos luxury markets, and a surprisingly competitive Albuquerque metro ($260,000–$330,000). The Albuquerque market has appreciated significantly post-COVID. Military-adjacent markets — Alamogordo (Holloman AFB), Rio Rancho (near Kirtland AFB), and Las Cruces (White Sands area) — run $195,000–$265,000.

Central Arkansas median prices run $190,000–$215,000. The comparison is closest in the military-adjacent NM markets, but Arkansas still wins on absolute affordability — and more importantly, on what the money buys in terms of neighborhood quality, school access, and proximity to amenities.

Income Tax: New Mexico vs Arkansas

New Mexico has a graduated income tax with a top rate of 5.9% — notably higher than Arkansas’s 4.4% top rate in 2026. For a household earning $100,000, this difference means paying approximately $1,500–$2,500 more per year in New Mexico vs. Arkansas. Both states are reducing rates over time, but Arkansas has been more aggressive in its cuts.

Critically for veterans: Arkansas fully exempts military retirement pay from state income tax. New Mexico does not offer a full exemption — it provides a partial deduction for military retirement income, but a portion remains taxable. For a retired E-8 drawing $3,200/month in retirement pay, this creates a meaningful annual tax difference in Arkansas’s favor.

Property Taxes: Arkansas vs New Mexico

New Mexico’s effective property tax rate is approximately 0.67% — slightly above Arkansas’s 0.61% but both well below the national average. On comparable home values, the difference is modest. Where Arkansas pulls ahead is on the absolute dollar tax bill: a $210,000 Arkansas home produces $1,000–$1,500/year in property taxes, while a $265,000 NM home at 0.67% produces $1,500–$1,900/year.

Military Installations: Kirtland/Holloman/White Sands vs LRAFB

New Mexico has three major military installations: Kirtland Air Force Base in Albuquerque (Air Force Materiel Command, nuclear weapons storage, Space Force units); Holloman Air Force Base in Alamogordo (54th Fighter Group, F-16 training, German Air Force training program); and White Sands Missile Range near Las Cruces (Army missile testing and evaluation). All three are active, mission-critical installations with strong surrounding communities.

Little Rock Air Force Base in Jacksonville AR hosts the 19th Airlift Wing — the Air Force’s primary C-130 training center. PCS moves between Kirtland and LRAFB are common within the Air Force. For personnel rotating out of Holloman (F-16 community) who are transitioning to transport or mobility aircraft, LRAFB is a natural next assignment.

Climate: Desert Southwest vs Central Arkansas

New Mexico’s climate is its most distinctive feature — dry, sunny, and dramatically different by elevation. Albuquerque gets 310 sunny days/year with low humidity and mild winters. Holloman and Alamogordo are desert hot in summer but with dramatic mountain scenery (Sacramento Mountains, White Sands). Central Arkansas is the opposite: humid, four distinct seasons, hot summers with thunderstorm patterns, and mild winters. Families who hate humidity or love the desert aesthetic will strongly prefer NM. Families who want green landscapes, more rain, and traditional Southern four-season living will adapt more easily to Arkansas.

Cost of Living: Beyond Housing

Beyond housing, Arkansas maintains its cost advantage over New Mexico in most categories. Groceries in Arkansas run 5–8% below the national average; NM is closer to average. Utility costs in Arkansas run higher in summer (air conditioning), roughly comparable to NM’s desert cooling costs. Healthcare costs are similar between the two states. The University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences (UAMS) in Little Rock and the John L. McClellan VA Medical Center provide strong healthcare infrastructure for Arkansas veterans — comparable to what Albuquerque’s VA system offers for NM veterans.

Relocating from New Mexico to Central Arkansas

NM-to-Arkansas moves typically include Air Force personnel PCSing between Kirtland, Holloman, or White Sands and LRAFB; military retirees who served in NM and want to maximize retirement pay purchasing power; remote workers and federal employees who can work anywhere and are drawn to Arkansas’s lower taxes and housing costs; and families priced out of Albuquerque’s appreciating market who want comparable community quality at lower 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 Arizona | Arkansas vs Nevada | Arkansas vs Colorado | Arkansas vs Texas | Arkansas vs Oklahoma | AR Relocation Guide
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State Comparison: Arkansas vs Nebraska — home prices ($199K vs $245K), property taxes (0.61% vs 1.63%), Offutt AFB (STRATCOM) vs LRAFB, full military retirement pay exemption, and milder winters.
State Comparison: Arkansas vs Iowa — similar home prices but Arkansas wins on property taxes (0.61% vs 1.57%), full military retirement pay exemption, and Central Arkansas’s mild winters vs Iowa’s harsh cold.
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.
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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.
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