Virginia Beach, VA · Virginia Beach (Independent City) County · Naval Station Norfolk / NAS Oceana
VA loans in Virginia Beach — Hampton Roads, the largest VA market in the country
Naval Station Norfolk is the largest naval base on earth. NAS Oceana is the East Coast Master Jet Base. JEB Little Creek-Fort Story sits right in your backyard. We close VA loans across Hampton Roads — and we know where the AICUZ noise zones, flood zones, and city-line tax differences will trip you up.
Virginia Beach (Independent City) County, VA · 2026 numbers
If you’re using a VA loan in Hampton Roads, you’re operating in the highest-volume VA market in the United States. Naval Station Norfolk supports 75 ships and 134 aircraft. NAS Oceana is the East Coast Master Jet Base for F/A-18 Super Hornets and the future home of F-35 squadrons. JEB Little Creek-Fort Story houses Naval Special Warfare Group Two. The local nuances — AICUZ noise zones, FEMA flood zones, city-line property tax variations — are layered and unforgiving. Like our work in Jacksonville, every Hampton Roads file has to handle deployment timing, appraisal queue management, and Atlantic-coast insurance.
The numbers: median home price in Virginia Beach is $355,000. The 2026 conforming loan limit for the City of Virginia Beach is $806,500 — verifiable on the FHFA conforming loan limits map. BAH for an E-5 with dependents in NAS Oceana ZIP codes runs $2,166 a month per the DoD BAH calculator. Virginia Beach’s effective property tax rate is roughly 0.99% — substantially lower than Texas military markets. Virginia has a state income tax (top bracket 5.75%), but the property tax savings make total cost of ownership competitive.
What's actually different about a Virginia Beach VA loan
Three things buyers from outside Virginia Beach (Independent City) County consistently get wrong
Hampton Roads VA dynamics differ from other markets in five specific ways.
The AICUZ noise zones around NAS Oceana are real, mapped, and legally consequential. Air Installation Compatible Use Zones designate areas under flight paths where residential construction is restricted or discouraged. Properties in Noise Zone 70-75 dB are flagged; properties in Noise Zone 75+ are nearly unbuyable for residential primary use. The City of Virginia Beach maintains a publicly searchable AICUZ map, but most agents and most lenders don’t pull it pre-offer. We do.
Flood zones are a separate, higher-stakes problem. Hampton Roads is the second-most flood-vulnerable region in the country after New Orleans. FEMA flood zones range from X (preferred, no mandatory flood insurance) to AE (1% annual chance flood, mandatory NFIP coverage) to VE (coastal velocity zone, very expensive). On a $400,000 home in Zone AE, NFIP flood insurance can run $1,200 to $4,000+ per year. Pull the official zone for any property under consideration via the FEMA Flood Map Service Center.
The city-line tax math matters more than people realize. Virginia Beach’s effective rate is 0.99%. Cross into Norfolk and it jumps to 1.43%. Chesapeake is 1.05%. Portsmouth is 1.40%. On a $400,000 home, the difference between Virginia Beach (0.99%) and Norfolk (1.43%) is $147 a month — over $1,700 a year, or $52,000 over a 30-year hold.
Hurricane and wind insurance is a separate cost layer most national lenders forget. Hampton Roads is in the Atlantic hurricane corridor. Most insurance policies have separate wind/hurricane deductibles (often 2-5% of dwelling coverage rather than a flat dollar amount). The wrong insurance carrier can make your monthly escrow $200-400 higher than necessary.
VA loan entitlement gets complex when you’ve used VA before. Hampton Roads buyers frequently arrive on PCS having already used part of their entitlement at a previous duty station. The math for second- or third-tier entitlement is non-trivial — and at Hampton Roads price points, it materially affects whether you can buy with $0 down or need a partial down payment. Same complexity applies for buyers PCSing in from San Diego or Honolulu where the high-cost VA limits change the entitlement math.
Sandbridge oceanfront looks magical until you price flood insurance on a Zone VE property. We've had buyers walk away from a beautiful house because the all-in monthly was $700 over what they thought it would be. Pull the FEMA map before the offer, not after.
Virginia 100% disabled veterans: Virginia provides a complete real estate tax exemption on primary residences for veterans rated 100% service-connected disabled. On a $355K Virginia Beach home, that’s roughly $3,500 a year saved every year. Virginia’s exemption is stricter than Texas — it’s all-or-nothing at 100%, with no sliding scale for partial ratings. We file the exemption with the City of Virginia Beach Real Estate Assessor as part of your closing.
Virginia Beach loan rules and the math
On a $355,000 Virginia Beach purchase with $0 down, first-time VA use, the funding fee is 2.15% — $7,633, rollable into the loan. Subsequent VA use is 3.3% or $11,715. Veterans rated 10% or higher disabled by the VA pay zero funding fee per the VA.gov funding fee schedule. Active-duty Purple Heart recipients also receive a funding fee waiver. Reserve and National Guard members qualify with six years of satisfactory service or 90 days under Title 10 activation orders.
Virginia Beach’s 0.99% effective tax rate produces about $293 a month in property tax on a $355,000 home — meaningfully lower than the same purchase in Norfolk ($423/mo) or Portsmouth ($414/mo). Virginia offers a real estate tax exemption for veterans rated 100% service-connected disabled — full property tax relief on a primary residence, which on a median home saves roughly $3,500 per year per the Virginia Department of Veterans Services. Partial-rated veterans don’t qualify (Virginia is stricter than Texas on this).
For an E-5 with dependents at $2,166 BAH, total estimated PITI on a median Virginia Beach purchase runs about $2,580 a month at current rates — slightly over BAH but tight. Adding flood insurance for Zone AE properties pushes total housing cost meaningfully higher; staying in Zone X (Princess Anne, Kempsville, Salem area) keeps the math working. Cross the line into Chesapeake or Suffolk and prices drop modestly while keeping the commute reasonable.
