Most service members choose a legal home state without knowing what it’s actually worth. The difference between the right state and the wrong one can run into six figures over a 20-year career.
Staff Sergeant Renee Calloway did everything right. She bought a house near Fort Liberty using her VA loan, locked a low rate, and felt good about the decision. What nobody told her was that she’d been filing taxes in the wrong state for three years because she never formally established home state somewhere else. She overpaid. A lot. Her story isn’t rare. It’s the rule.
The Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA) gives you the legal right to maintain a home state in any state, regardless of where the military sends you. That’s powerful. But most service members either keep the state they enlisted from out of habit, or they pick whatever feels easiest at the PCS office. Almost nobody does the math first. Let’s fix that.
Your Legal Home State Is a Financial Decision, Not Just a Paperwork One
Your legal home state determines which state gets to tax your military pay. Nine states currently have no state income tax at all: Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, and Wyoming. If you’re earning $70,000 in base pay and you’re registered in California as your home state (state income tax up to 13.3%) versus Texas (zero), that’s not a rounding error. That’s a real, recurring cost that compounds every single year you serve.
It gets more specific than the top-line rate. Some states exempt military pay entirely, even while taxing other income. Illinois exempts all military pay from state income tax. Oklahoma exempts the first $1,500. Montana gives a partial exemption based on duty location. These are not obscure loopholes. They are written into state law specifically for service members, and they go unused by thousands of people who never knew to look.
The SCRA also protects your spouse. Under the Veterans Benefits and Transition Act of 2018, a military spouse can now elect to use the same home state as the service member for tax purposes, even if they’re earning income in a different state. That one provision, which took effect in 2018, is still being under-utilized because most families simply don’t know it exists.
Property Tax Exemptions Are Where It Gets Interesting
If you own a home, even one you rent out while stationed elsewhere, several states offer property tax exemptions or reductions for active duty service members and veterans. The details vary widely, and that variation is where the money is.
Texas offers a 100% property tax exemption for veterans with a 100% disability rating from the VA. Florida offers a similar exemption. But here’s what most people miss: some states extend partial exemptions to active duty members who are not yet veterans and who do not yet have a disability rating. Pennsylvania, for example, provides real estate tax exemptions for certain active duty members through county-level programs that most service members never apply for because the outreach is minimal.
Louisiana has one of the more overlooked programs: the Homestead Exemption can be maintained by a service member even while deployed or stationed elsewhere, protecting their primary residence from reassessment as long as intent to return is documented. That documentation requirement trips people up. It’s a two-page form. Most people skip it because no one told them to fill it out before they left.
What to Actually Do Before Your Next PCS
Step one is running the numbers on your current home state before the next set of orders arrives. Get your current year’s LES, pull your base pay, and look up your home state’s military pay tax treatment. Military OneSource has a state-by-state breakdown that’s reasonably current, but verify directly with your state’s department of revenue because the laws update more often than any single database does.
Step two is deciding whether a state of record change makes financial sense. To change your state of record, you need intent to return and some physical presence. That means getting a driver’s license in the new state, registering a vehicle, opening a bank account, and updating your voter registration. It doesn’t require owning property there, but you do need to be able to show genuine ties. Keeping a P.O. box and nothing else won’t hold up if it’s ever questioned.
Step three, and this one matters if you’re planning to buy: look at the property tax treatment in any state where you’re considering purchasing, not just the mortgage math. A home that pencils out financially because of a low purchase price might look very different when you factor in a state with no military property tax exemption versus one with a meaningful one. Run both scenarios before you commit.
Why Timing This Wrong Costs You Real Money
There’s a window problem with state of record changes that catches people off guard. If you receive PCS orders in April and you want to establish your legal home state in a new state, you need to act before December 31 of that tax year for the change to apply. That sounds obvious. But PCS moves often land in summer, and between in-processing, finding housing, getting kids enrolled, and surviving the first 90 days at a new installation, filing a DD Form 2058 and updating your state tax withholding gets pushed to next year.
Put it on a calendar. The week you sign your lease or close on a house at the new station, that’s the week you handle home state paperwork. Not after the holidays. Not when things slow down. That week.
A Quick Scenario That Makes This Concrete
Take a hypothetical E-7 with 14 years of service, earning roughly $57,000 in base pay. Domiciled in California, that person pays somewhere between $2,800 and $3,500 in state income tax annually on their military pay, depending on deductions. Domiciled in Texas or Florida, that number drops to zero.
Over the remaining six years to a 20-year retirement, that’s a cumulative difference of $17,000 to $21,000. That’s not counting the spouse’s income, which in a two-income household could easily double the figure. And that’s before you factor in any property tax exemptions that might apply post-retirement if they settle in a state that offers them to veterans.
This is the math that doesn’t show up in any transition briefing. It’s the math that happens or doesn’t happen based entirely on whether someone told you to look.
Do This Before Your Next Move
You don’t need a financial advisor to start this process. You need 45 minutes, your current LES, and the Military OneSource state tax guide. Compare your current home state’s treatment of military pay against two or three states where you have a realistic connection. Then check the property tax exemption landscape in any state you’re considering buying in.
The financial framework you build around your military career shouldn’t depend on what got handed to you at your first unit. You have legal protections under the SCRA that most of your civilian peers don’t get anywhere close to. Use them deliberately.
If your financial picture around housing and taxes feels unclear, connect with a military-savvy CPA or a HUD-approved housing counselor who works with service members. Your installation’s Personal Financial Counseling program is also a free starting point. Don’t leave this to chance or habit. The decisions you make about home state and property ownership during your serving years are decisions that follow you into retirement.
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Written By: HelpVet.net
Photo Credit: HelpVet.net