Killeen, TX · Bell County · Fort Cavazos
VA loans for Fort Cavazos buyers, by the people who close them
PCSing to Cavazos or already stationed here? The rules are slightly different than the VA loan you read about online. We close 40+ Bell County VA loans a year. Here's what actually matters.
Bell County, TX · 2026 numbers
If you’re using a VA loan to buy a home in Killeen, the federal rules are the same as anywhere else in the country. The local rules — Bell County’s appraisal panel, the way Fort Cavazos PCS season distorts the closing calendar, how the Texas Vet Loan competes with the federal VA program for Texas vets, and what the 100% disabled veteran homestead exemption actually saves you on a Killeen home — those are the things that determine whether your closing goes smoothly or runs sideways.
The numbers, briefly: median home price in Killeen is $241,000. The 2026 conforming loan limit for Bell County is $806,500, which means virtually every Killeen purchase falls within standard VA loan territory with $0 down. BAH for an E-5 with dependents at Cavazos is $1,776 a month. Bell County’s effective property tax rate is 1.82%, which sits below the Texas state average and well below high-tax markets like El Paso (2.45%) or Bexar County (2.13%). Texas has no state income tax, so military families relocating from California, Virginia, or Washington see meaningful net-pay improvements after PCS.
What's actually different about a Killeen VA loan
Three things buyers from outside Bell County consistently get wrong
Here’s what consistently surprises buyers PCSing to Cavazos from outside Texas, in the order it’ll actually affect you.
The Bell County VA appraisal queue is slower than DFW or Houston. The local panel of VA-certified appraisers is smaller — eight to twelve appraisers actively working Bell County compared to thirty-plus in Tarrant County. Routine VA appraisals turn around in 10 to 14 days here. During PCS season (May through August), it stretches to 18 to 21 days. If your real estate agent quotes you a 30-day close on a VA-flagged property, that’s optimistic. Plan for 37 to 40 days, and write your earnest money and contingency dates accordingly. Veterans United’s national average is 40 days; ours in Bell County is 38 when we control the timeline from pre-approval onward.
Start your file before you arrive. About 60% of our Cavazos closings start before the buyer is on the ground in Killeen. We can begin pre-approval on your current LES alone — no need for final orders. By the time you arrive, the only documents we still need are usually your final orders, an updated paystub, and a bank statement. Buyers who wait until they’re physically in Killeen to start the file routinely close 50+ days after they arrive, which means another two months of TLE or hotel bills.
The Texas Vet Loan is a parallel option, not just a backup. The Texas Veterans Land Board program prices about 0.5% below standard federal VA in most rate environments. On a $241,000 Killeen home, that 0.5% rate delta is about $80 per month, or roughly $29,000 in interest over 30 years — not pocket change. Eligibility requires that you were a Texas resident at the time you entered military service. We run both quotes side by side for any eligible Texas vet. Sometimes federal VA wins (subsequent use buyers, certain disabled-rated buyers), sometimes Texas Vet wins (first-use, larger loan amounts, falling rate environments). The point is to actually run the comparison rather than defaulting to whichever one your last lender quoted.
Cavazos buyers shouldn’t limit themselves to Killeen city limits. The four cities buyers actually compete in are Killeen, Harker Heights, Copperas Cove, and Nolanville — all within a 12-minute commute of the main gate. Harker Heights typically runs $20,000 to $40,000 above Killeen for comparable square footage, with newer inventory (2010+ build year is common) and better-rated schools. Copperas Cove runs $10,000 to $20,000 below Killeen, slightly older housing stock, but commensurately lower property taxes (Coryell County’s effective rate is 1.71% vs Bell’s 1.82%). Nolanville is the smallest of the four, mostly newer subdivisions, slightly higher prices than Killeen proper. The right city is usually about commute, school zone, and price point — the VA loan works in all four.
Junior enlisted from high-BAH duty stations consistently overbuy. If you’re coming from Ramstein, Yokota, or Hawaii — where BAH or OHA was supporting a much bigger housing payment — anchoring to that previous payment in a Killeen market where median is $241K leads to overpayment on the local market. We run “BAH-anchored” comp searches first, showing buyers what their BAH actually buys at Cavazos before showing them what they’d qualify for. The qualification number can be 30%+ higher than the BAH-anchored number.
Junior enlisted PCSing in from Germany or Hawaii almost always overbuy relative to local comps. Harker Heights runs $20K–$40K above Killeen for the same square footage; Copperas Cove runs $10K–$20K below. We map duty location to school zone before we map it to home price.
Disabled-rated veterans, read this: Bell County honors the Texas 100% disabled veteran homestead exemption — full property tax relief on your primary residence. On a $241K Killeen home that’s roughly $4,400 a year, every year. Partial exemptions apply at 10–90% ratings on a sliding scale. We file the exemption with the Bell County Appraisal District as part of your closing, you don’t have to handle it yourself.
Killeen loan rules and the math
The VA funding fee is the most commonly misunderstood number in the entire VA loan ecosystem. On a $241,000 Killeen purchase with $0 down and first-time VA use, the funding fee is 2.15% — that’s $5,181.50. It can be rolled into the loan rather than paid at close. Subsequent VA use (you’ve used your entitlement before) carries a 3.3% funding fee — $7,953 on the same purchase. Veterans rated 10% or higher disabled by the VA pay zero funding fee. Period. Active-duty Purple Heart recipients also receive a funding fee waiver as of 2020.
Property taxes deserve more attention than most VA buyers give them. At Bell County’s 1.82% effective tax rate, a $241,000 home generates about $4,386 in annual property tax — roughly $365 a month. The Texas homestead exemption, which you file with the Bell County Appraisal District after closing, typically reduces your taxable value by $25,000 to $40,000 depending on the school district, knocking 8% to 12% off that monthly tax bill. We file the homestead exemption as part of your closing process — you don’t have to handle it yourself, and it has to be filed before the next April 30th to take effect for that tax year.
For an E-5 with dependents at Cavazos receiving $1,776 in BAH, total estimated PITI on a median Killeen purchase runs about $1,891 a month at current rates — $115 over BAH. That gap closes after homestead exemption is applied, and dual-income or COLA-supplemented households generally absorb it without strain. We run the BAH-versus-PITI math for every buyer at the pre-approval stage so you see the real number, not a payment that excludes taxes and insurance.
