Living in Arkansas vs Virginia 2026 | Cost of Living, Taxes & Military Life Compared
Living in Arkansas vs Virginia 2026 | Cost of Living, Taxes & Military Life Compared
Virginia is one of the most militarily significant states in America — home to the Pentagon, Fort Belvoir, Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall, Quantico, Joint Base Langley-Eustis, Fort Gregg-Adams, and the largest concentration of military and defense-related employment in the world. For the many thousands of military families who cycle through Virginia assignments and then PCS to Little Rock Air Force Base, the contrast between Virginia living costs and Arkansas living costs can be breathtaking — in the best possible way. This comparison helps Virginia families understand what to expect when moving to Central Arkansas.
Home Prices: Virginia vs Arkansas — The Biggest Gap in This Series
Virginia’s home prices vary dramatically by region. Northern Virginia (Fairfax, Arlington, Alexandria, Prince William counties) — where most military families near the Pentagon are assigned — has median home prices of $550,000–$700,000+. Fairfax County median is approximately $660,000. Virginia Beach/Hampton Roads (near Langley, Ft. Eustis, Oceana, Little Creek) averages $330,000–$400,000. Richmond averages $340,000–$380,000. Statewide Virginia median is approximately $380,000.
Central Arkansas median home prices range $220,000–$260,000 — roughly 40% of Northern Virginia prices and 60–70% of Hampton Roads prices. For a family selling a Northern Virginia home at $650,000 and buying in Central Arkansas at $280,000, the equity difference is enormous — often allowing them to pay cash or have a very small mortgage. This financial reset is one of the most powerful reasons military families choose Arkansas after a Virginia assignment.
Property Taxes: Arkansas Wins
Virginia’s effective property tax rate averages approximately 0.82% of market value statewide — but Northern Virginia rates are often higher. Fairfax County’s effective rate is approximately 1.03%. On a $600,000 NOVA home, that’s $6,180/year in property taxes.
Arkansas’s effective rate of 0.63% on a $260,000 home yields just $1,638/year. The combination of dramatically lower home values AND lower tax rates makes Central Arkansas property taxes a fraction of what NOVA families pay.
State Income Tax: Virginia Is Higher
Virginia’s income tax tops out at 5.75% for income over $17,000 — a surprisingly low threshold that means most working Virginians are paying the top rate. Virginia has not significantly reformed this graduated structure in decades.
Arkansas’s top income tax rate is 4.4% for income over $90,000. For middle-income families — E-5 to O-3 military grades, teachers, nurses — Arkansas’s effective income tax rate is meaningfully lower than Virginia’s.
Military Retirement Income: Arkansas Fully Exempt, Virginia Partial
Arkansas fully exempts all military retirement pay from state income tax — no limit, no age restriction, no phase-in period.
Virginia has been gradually increasing its military retirement exemption. As of 2022, Virginia exempts up to $20,000 of military retirement pay (increasing to $40,000 by 2025 under state legislation). However, Virginia does not offer full exemption for most retirees. For a retired E-8 or O-5 receiving $35,000–$55,000 in annual military retirement pay, Arkansas’s full exemption versus Virginia’s partial exemption represents meaningful annual tax savings of $700–$1,500+.
BAH Comparison: NOVA vs Little Rock
BAH (Basic Allowance for Housing) in Northern Virginia is among the highest in the nation — an E-5 with dependents receives approximately $2,700–$2,900/month in the Washington DC BAH area. An O-3 with dependents receives approximately $3,800–$4,200/month.
Little Rock BAH for an E-5 with dependents is approximately $1,500–$1,600/month. O-3 with dependents receives approximately $2,100–$2,300/month. While Little Rock BAH is lower than NOVA BAH, the dramatic reduction in housing costs means Little Rock BAH covers housing MORE comfortably than NOVA BAH. Many LRAFB families report being able to save money living off-base for the first time after a NOVA assignment.
Traffic and Commute: Arkansas Is a Relief
Northern Virginia traffic is notoriously brutal — the DC metro area consistently ranks among the worst traffic in the United States. Pentagon/Fort Belvoir commutes of 45–90 minutes each way are routine. Even moderate distances become major time commitments.
Little Rock traffic is minimal by comparison. Even in peak morning traffic, most Central Arkansas commutes from suburban communities to LRAFB run 20–45 minutes on uncongested highways. The quality-of-life improvement in daily commute time alone is significant for Virginia transplants.
Cost of Living Index: Virginia vs Arkansas
Northern Virginia’s cost of living index sits approximately 35–45% above the national average. Hampton Roads is approximately 5–10% above national average. Arkansas sits approximately 10–12% below national average. The gap between NOVA and Central Arkansas is staggering — families moving from Fairfax County to Conway or Cabot often feel like they received a substantial raise even on the same salary.
Climate Comparison
Virginia has four distinct seasons: mild winters (20–30 inches of snow in NOVA), warm humid summers (90s), beautiful springs and falls. Central Arkansas: very mild winters (4–5 inches of snow), hot humid summers (95–100°F+), brief but stunning springs and falls. Arkansas summers are hotter than Virginia; Virginia winters involve more snow and cold. Both have excellent fall foliage seasons.
Military Installations: Virginia vs LRAFB
Virginia hosts more military installations than nearly any other state. The Pentagon, Fort Belvoir, Fort Myer, NAS Oceana, JEB Little Creek-Fort Story, Fort Gregg-Adams (formerly Lee), Quantico, JB Langley-Eustis, and numerous other facilities make Virginia the center of the US military universe. Little Rock AFB is smaller in scope but is the world’s premier C-130 training center, a strategically significant installation with a tight-knit community feel that many service members prefer after the overwhelming scale of the DC area.
Virginia to Arkansas: Who Makes This Move?
The Virginia-to-Arkansas move most commonly happens when: an LRAFB-based unit PCSes members from Virginia assignments; aviators transition from other aircraft to C-130s and train at LRAFB; Guard/Reserve members affiliated with Little Rock’s 189th Airlift Wing come from Virginia; or retiring service members choose Arkansas for post-military life after Virginia assignments.
In every case, the financial improvement for the family is significant. Ashley Watters has worked with multiple Virginia transplants who used the equity from their NOVA home sale to purchase Central Arkansas homes with minimal or no mortgage.
Connect with Ashley About PCSing from Virginia to Arkansas


