Bases: Luke · Davis-Monthan · Yuma · Fort Huachuca · $0 down VA · HB 2792 disabled-vet tax help · Call Mike (480) 296-6513
Arizona VA Loan Specialist · Cornerstone First Mortgage · NMLS #173855 Call Mike Certo · (480) 296-6513
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Arizona as a retirement destination for vets

Mike Certo · Cornerstone First Mortgage · NMLS #260555 ·

AZ consistently ranks top-3 in the US for veteran retirement alongside Florida + Texas. The reasons stack: warm winters, no state tax on military retirement pay, expanded disabled-vet property tax exemption (2026), three full VA Medical Centers, and a deep retiring-vet community across multiple AZ regions. Here's the AZ-specific case + the VA loan side of moving here in retirement.

Why AZ ranks top-3 for vet retirement

State tax treatment of military retirement

Arizona fully exempts military retirement pay from state income tax. This applies to: - Active-duty retirement pension - Reserve component retirement pay - VA disability compensation (already federally tax-free) - Survivor Benefit Plan (SBP) payments

A 20-year-retired O-5 with ~$60K annual pension would owe ~$3,500 in CA state tax or ~$3,000 in OR state tax on that income. AZ owes $0. Over a 20-year retirement, this is $60K+ in cumulative savings.

2026 HB 2792 property tax exemption

The expanded Arizona disabled veteran property tax exemption (effective Feb 2026) gives 100%-rated vets a full property tax exemption on their primary residence. For a $475K Phoenix home, that's roughly $2,400/year in savings — $48,000 over a 20-year retirement. Partial-rated vets get proportional exemptions. Full HB 2792 guide.

Three full VA Medical Centers

  • Phoenix VAMC (Carl T. Hayden) — full hospital + specialty clinics; covers entire Phoenix metro + northern AZ
  • Tucson VAMC (Southern Arizona) — full hospital; covers Tucson metro + southeast AZ + Fort Huachuca area
  • Prescott VAMC (Bob Stump) — smaller facility; covers central/north AZ + serves as referral hub for outlying areas

Plus 25+ Community-Based Outpatient Clinics (CBOCs) across the state. AZ vets typically have a VA primary-care option within 30 minutes of their home.

Climate trade-offs

Pro for retirees: Warm winters (Phoenix avg January low 45°F), virtually no snow in lowlands, very low humidity year-round. Great for vets with joint pain, COPD, or other conditions exacerbated by cold.

Con: Phoenix + Yuma summers hit 110°F+ for weeks. Vets with heat-sensitive conditions (cardiovascular, respiratory) often choose mountain communities (Prescott, Flagstaff) instead.

Active retiring-vet community

  • Sun City + Sun City West (Phoenix metro) — 55+ purpose-built communities; very high vet density
  • Vistancia Trilogy (Peoria) — 55+ resort community with strong vet population
  • Encanterra (San Tan Valley) — 55+ Shea Homes community
  • Sun Lakes (Chandler) — older but established 55+ community
  • Prescott — non-age-restricted but heavy retiring-vet concentration (#3 destination after Sun Cities)
  • Anthem Country Club — golf + active-adult oriented

VA loan use in retirement

A common misconception: VA loans are only for active-duty + young vets. Reality — VA loans are available to any eligible veteran regardless of age, including those decades into retirement. Many retiring vets actively use VA financing to:

1. Right-size from a larger family home to a retirement home

Sell the suburban 4-bed where the kids grew up; buy a 2-bed Sun City patio home. Cash from sale covers most of the new home; VA loan covers the rest at $0 down.

2. Convert proceeds into a retirement portfolio

Some retiring vets prefer to keep sale proceeds invested + use VA's $0-down to leverage into the new home. This works particularly well when: - Pension + Social Security + VA disability comfortably covers PITI - Retirement portfolio earns more than the VA loan rate (typical at market returns above typical VA rates)

3. Buy and improve aging-in-place features

VA loans can be used for purchase-with-renovation. AZ retiring vets often want: - Single-story or first-floor primary suite - Wider doors + lower thresholds - Walk-in shower with grab bars - Reinforced wall blocking for future mobility equipment - Generator-ready electrical for AZ summer outage backup

These improvements can be financed as part of the purchase loan via VA renovation financing programs.

4. Use entitlement that was tied up earlier

Many vets used VA financing 20-30 years ago + assumed entitlement was permanently used. Reality — once you sell or pay off the original VA loan, entitlement restores. A vet who used VA in 1995 + paid off in 2018 likely has full entitlement available now.

Disabled veteran benefits stack in AZ retirement

For 100%-rated disabled vets, AZ-specific benefits stack:

  • HB 2792 property tax exemption (~$2,000-$8,000/year)
  • VA disability compensation (federally tax-free, varies $4,098+/mo for 100% w/ spouse + 2 kids)
  • Federal VA pension (if low-income + non-service-connected disability)
  • AZ Department of Veterans' Services programs (state vet home access, education benefits for dependents, hunting/fishing license discounts)
  • Cornerstone NMLS + AZ DPA programs still available even in retirement (no age cap on AZ DPA)

Considerations specific to AZ retiring vets

Snowbird-to-resident transition

Many retiring vets first arrive as snowbirds. Mike has a dedicated guide for converting snowbird to full-time + the VA loan implications: Snowbird to AZ resident.

Wildfire + insurance in mountain communities

If retiring to Prescott, Flagstaff, Payson, or Sedona, insurance is now meaningfully more expensive + harder to obtain. Factor this into retirement budget. Full guide.

Specialty medical care

Phoenix + Tucson VAMCs have full specialty care including cardiology, oncology, neurology, mental health. Prescott VAMC covers basics + refers out for complex care. Mountain town vets accept a 1-2 hour drive for specialty.

Estate planning

AZ has community property law (different from common-law states). If transitioning from a common-law state (most non-Western states), revise estate documents. AZ has homestead protection up to ~$250K — important for asset protection in retirement.

Spouse + survivor considerations

Surviving spouse VA benefits include Dependency and Indemnity Compensation (DIC) — tax-free monthly payments to surviving spouses of service-connected disabled vets. AZ also has surviving spouse property tax exemptions worth checking.

Real example — O-5 retired moving from Virginia

O-5 retired, family-of-2 (wife), 70% disability rating, $76K annual military retirement + $2,089/mo VA disability + $2,600/mo Social Security. Selling Virginia home for $730K (mortgage-free).

  • Looking at Prescott + Surprise + Vistancia options
  • Picks $585K patio home in Vistancia Trilogy (55+ section)
  • VA loan: $585K, $0 down (chose to keep VA cash flow rather than put down + use sale proceeds for retirement portfolio)
  • 70% disability = VA funding fee WAIVED
  • Monthly P&I (rate-dependent — current quote available on request): $3,698
  • Maricopa property tax (0.51%): $249/mo (currently — HB 2792 reduces this to 30% remaining = $75/mo within first year)
  • HOA (Vistancia Trilogy): $250/mo
  • Insurance: $130/mo
  • Total PITI: ~$4,150/mo at year 1; ~$3,975/mo after HB 2792 applies

Income covers comfortably with significant surplus for travel + retirement lifestyle. VA cash-flow retained for retirement portfolio.

Frequently asked questions

Is there an age limit on VA loans?

No. VA explicitly prohibits age discrimination in loan approvals. Income (pension, Social Security, VA disability) + credit drive qualification, not age.

Can I use VA disability + Social Security as qualifying income?

Yes. Both are tax-free + count fully toward DTI. Most lenders gross-up VA disability 25% for DTI purposes (which boosts your qualifying amount). See gross-up calculator.

Does AZ tax Social Security?

No. AZ exempts Social Security from state income tax for all residents.

Should I retire in Phoenix or somewhere cooler?

Climate preference is personal. Many vets do "summer Prescott / winter Phoenix" with two homes — though that's expensive. Single-home retirees increasingly choose Prescott or Cottonwood for cooler summers without giving up VA Medical access.

What about the Veterans' Affairs cemeteries in AZ?

AZ has Phoenix National Cemetery (south Phoenix), Prescott National Cemetery, and the National Memorial Cemetery of Arizona (north Phoenix). Free interment for eligible veterans + spouses.

Retiring to AZ and want a tailored walkthrough? Mike's worked with dozens of out-of-state retiring vets moving to AZ. Free 15-minute consult.