Colorado Springs, CO · El Paso County · Fort Carson / USAFA / Peterson SFB / Schriever SFB
VA loans in Colorado Springs — five military installations, the most veteran-dense city in America
Fort Carson, the Air Force Academy, Peterson Space Force Base, Schriever Space Force Base, and Cheyenne Mountain Space Force Station. Colorado Springs has more active military and veterans per capita than any major US city.
El Paso County, CO · 2026 numbers
Colorado Springs is the most veteran-dense major city in the United States, with roughly one in three adult residents either active-duty military, military retiree, or veteran. Five major installations operate in or directly adjacent to the city: Fort Carson (4th Infantry Division and 10th Special Forces Group), the United States Air Force Academy (USAFA), Peterson Space Force Base, Schriever Space Force Base, and Cheyenne Mountain Space Force Station (NORAD). Each installation creates its own neighborhood gravity. Like our Tacoma JBLM file work, every Colorado Springs transaction handles multi-installation gravity, but the Colorado vs. Texas tax differential is uniquely consequential here.
The numbers: median home price in Colorado Springs is approximately $465,000. The 2026 conforming loan limit for El Paso County (Colorado, not Texas) is $806,500 standard. BAH for an E-5 with dependents at Fort Carson runs $2,151 a month. El Paso County Colorado’s effective property tax rate is approximately 0.51% — one of the lowest in the country and dramatically below Texas military markets. Colorado has a state income tax (flat 4.4%), but the property tax savings, the high-altitude lifestyle, and the depth of military community make the city consistently one of the top-rated military-friendly destinations in the country.
What's actually different about a Colorado Springs VA loan
Three things buyers from outside El Paso County consistently get wrong
Colorado Springs VA dynamics differ from other markets in five specific ways.
The five-installation gravity creates five distinct submarkets within one metro. Fort Carson personnel cluster south — Fountain, Security-Widefield, Stetson Hills, southeast Springs. Peterson SFB personnel often live in central or east Springs — Cimarron Hills, Powers corridor. Schriever SFB sits far east — Falcon, Peyton, Black Squirrel Creek. USAFA personnel and faculty look north — Monument, Black Forest, Tri-Lakes (premium). Cheyenne Mountain SFS personnel live close to the mountain — Broadmoor, Cheyenne Cañon area, southwest Springs. We map duty installation to neighborhood for every buyer.
The Colorado-vs-Texas property tax comparison is one of the most dramatic on this list. El Paso County Colorado’s effective rate is 0.51%. Bell County Texas is 1.82%. On a $400,000 home, the Colorado advantage is approximately $437 a month — over $5,000 a year, $26,000 over a 5-year stationing window. This delta consistently shocks buyers PCSing from Cavazos to Carson. The math also explains why mid-career retirees from Texas often choose Colorado for retirement.
Wildfire risk is mapped, real, and underwritten differently than buyers expect. The Black Forest fire of 2013 burned 489 homes; the Waldo Canyon fire of 2012 burned 346. Both events are within recent insurance memory. Colorado Springs neighborhoods west of I-25 (Mountain Shadows, Manitou Springs, Cedar Heights) and the Black Forest area carry elevated wildfire-risk insurance premiums. Some properties in extreme-risk zones face insurance market unavailability. We pull Colorado Forest Service wildfire risk maps for every property in flagged zones.
School district selection drives massive price variation across the metro. Academy School District 20 (north Springs, Briargate, Pine Creek, Monument feeders) is the highest-rated district. District 49 (east Springs, Falcon area) offers newer construction at slightly lower price points. District 11 (central Springs) is mixed. District 38 (Lewis-Palmer, Monument) is excellent and small.
Colorado’s veteran benefits include a property tax exemption that’s structured differently than Texas or Florida. Colorado provides a 50% exemption on the first $200,000 of actual value (so up to $100,000 of value is exempted) for veterans rated 100% permanent and total service-connected disabled, per the Colorado Department of Military and Veterans Affairs. The exemption is meaningful but caps lower than Florida or Virginia’s full exemptions.
The Cavazos-to-Carson PCS is the most underrated tax win in the Army. Same uniform, same career, $5,000 a year less in property taxes. Don't let your real estate agent talk you into matching your Killeen mortgage — the math is fundamentally different here.
Colorado disabled veterans exemption: Colorado provides a 50% exemption on the first $200,000 of actual value (up to $100,000 of value exempted) for veterans rated 100% permanent and total service-connected disabled. On a $465K Colorado Springs home, that saves approximately $510 a year. We file with the El Paso County Assessor as part of your closing.
Colorado Springs loan rules and the math
On a $465,000 Colorado Springs purchase with $0 down, first-time VA use, the funding fee is 2.15% — $9,998, rollable into the loan. Subsequent VA use is 3.3% or $15,345. Veterans rated 10% or higher disabled by the VA pay zero funding fee per the VA.gov funding fee schedule. Reserve and National Guard members qualify with six years of satisfactory service or 90 days under Title 10 activation orders.
El Paso County Colorado’s 0.51% effective tax rate produces about $198 a month in property tax on a $465,000 home — among the lowest tax burdens of any major military market in the country. Colorado’s Disabled Veterans Property Tax Exemption (50% of first $200,000 of actual value, for 100% permanent and total disabled veterans) saves approximately $510 a year on a median home. Colorado has no state-level homestead exemption analogous to Florida.
For an E-5 with dependents at $2,151 BAH, total estimated PITI on a median Colorado Springs purchase runs about $2,920 a month — over BAH, but the low property tax and absence of state-level homestead-impact taxes keep the gap manageable. The bigger sensitivity is wildfire-zone insurance and altitude-related home maintenance costs.
