
A smoother PCS to Las Vegas begins well before the moving boxes arrive — with base access, temporary lodging, and home search details already mapped out.
Receiving orders for a permanent change of station (PCS) instantly starts the clock on a major move. It can be a very hectic time for you and your family, especially if you’re doing it for the first time.
If you’ve been reassigned to Nellis Air Force Base or Creech Air Force Base, this guide will help you make the military relocation to Las Vegas less stressful.
Start with your orders, report date, and base assignment
Before you start touring homes, get clear on the two key details that will shape the rest of the move: where you are reporting and when you need to arrive.
Once you receive your PCS orders:
- Contact your base transportation office. This is where you can start sorting out moving options, shipment timelines, weight limits, and other details tied to your household goods.
- Consider reaching out to the family center at your gaining installation. They can point you toward relocation resources, school support, childcare information, and local guidance before you arrive in Las Vegas.
- Sync your real estate timeline with your report date. If you are buying a Las Vegas home near Nellis or Creech AFB, ask your lender and agent whether your preferred closing date leaves enough room for appraisal, inspections, underwriting, final walkthrough, and other key phases.
Prepare for a remote purchase if you can’t tour in person
If you need to quickly start your Las Vegas home search even while you’re still in another duty station, you don’t have to come in blind. Keep these tips in mind.
- Hire an agent with local expertise. A Las Vegas agent specializing in military family relocation is your eyes and ears on the ground. They’ll make sure the home you’re eyeing fits the bill.
- Ask for a video walkthrough. Don’t settle for a seemingly polished listing just from the photos alone. Ask your agent to walk through the home slowly and show details like:
- Driveway size
- Garage storage
- Closet space
- Secondary bedrooms
- Neighboring homes
- Backyard privacy
- Signs of deferred maintenance
- Ask your agent to test the drive to Nellis or Creech during the hours you are most likely to commute. A map estimate can miss the details that shape your week, including gate traffic, school drop-off congestion, and freeway access.
- Review the paperwork early. Before writing an offer, ask for the documents that can affect your budget and long-term plans, such as: HOA rules, seller disclosures, utility averages, pool equipment records, etc.
- Check for potential issues specific to Las Vegas. Ask your inspector to pay special attention to:
- Air conditioning age and service history
- Insulation and window quality
- Roof condition
- Irrigation
- Pool equipment
- Solar panel ownership or lease terms
Find the top Las Vegas communities for military families

From North Las Vegas to Summerlin, military families often compare lifestyle and commute trade-offs before choosing where to buy.
Choosing where to live in Las Vegas is not as simple as picking the shortest drive to base. For military families, the right community has to work on several levels — the commute, school options, childcare, daily errands, and the possibility of selling or renting the home when new orders arrive.
- Centennial Hills is a northwest Las Vegas area centered around U.S. 95 and the 215 Beltway, with shopping, medical access, suburban neighborhoods, and the 120-acre Centennial Hills Park. It’s approximately 30 to 45 minutes to Creech and 30 to 40 minutes to Nellis.
- Providence is a northwest master-planned community of more than 5,600 homes across 27 neighborhoods. Approximately 35 to 45 minutes to Nellis and 40 to 50 minutes to Creech.
- Summerlin is a 22,500-acre master-planned community along the western edge of the Las Vegas Valley, with village-style neighborhoods, parks, trails, golf courses, Downtown Summerlin, and access to Red Rock Canyon. Approximately 35 to 50 minutes to Nellis, 45 to 60 minutes to Creech, depending on the exact village and gate.
- Aliante is a roughly 1,900-acre master-planned community in North Las Vegas, with parks, trails, an 18-hole golf course, and the 20-acre Nature Discovery Park nearby. About 5 to 25 minutes to Nellis, 45 to 55 minutes to Creech.
| Should you rent first or buy a home right away?
Buying a Las Vegas home near Nellis or Creech AFB may make sense if you already know which side of the valley fits your base commute, school needs, budget, and long-term plans. However, renting first may be smarter if you are new to Las Vegas, unsure how Nellis or Creech commutes will feel, comparing school options, or still deciding whether northwest, North Las Vegas, Summerlin, or another area fits your household. |
Know the area’s school options and medical access
Schools and healthcare access are essentials to nail down well before writing an offer. These are some of the schools you’ll come across while researching the main relocation areas.
- Coral Academy of Science Nellis Campus: A STEM-focused public charter option on Nellis AFB.
- Somerset Academy Aliante: A North Las Vegas charter school serving students in kindergarten through eighth grade.
- Goynes STEM Academy: A North Las Vegas public elementary school serving pre-K through fifth grade.
- Legacy High School: A North Las Vegas public high school with college and career pathway programming.
- Bozarth Elementary School: A northwest Las Vegas elementary school often researched by families looking near Providence and Skye Canyon.
- Arbor View High School: A northwest Las Vegas public high school serving the Centennial Hills area.
- Coral Academy Centennial Hills: A Coral Academy charter campus in the Centennial Hills area.
- Somerset Academy Skye Canyon: A charter school in northwest Las Vegas serving kindergarten through eighth grade
Medical access is just as important to map out early, especially if your household needs prescriptions, specialty care, pregnancy care, or therapy.
- Mike O’Callaghan Military Medical Center: Located at Nellis AFB, this is the primary military medical facility for many incoming families. It provides preventive, emergency, and acute care for active duty personnel and dependents, with care also provided or coordinated for retirees and other beneficiaries.
- Hunters Medical Clinic at Creech AFB: Provides routine medical care for the Creech AFB population, including flight medicine, family health teams, dental care, physical therapy, ambulance service, and rotating specialties.
- North Las Vegas VA Medical Center: A useful facility for veterans and eligible beneficiaries — with primary care, specialty health services, cardiology, mental health care, pain management, and more.
Get VA loan-ready and understand your PCS allowances
A military relocation budget has two sides: what you can afford to buy, and what the military may reimburse during the move. Before you start writing offers, get clear on both.
- Start with VA loan pre-approval. Get your Certificate of Eligibility (COE), choose a lender who regularly handles VA loans, and ask for a realistic payment range. Remember, your approval amount is not your spending target. You can find more info about VA home loans here.
- Basic Allowance for Housing (BAH) is merely a guide. BAH can help determine your housing budget, but Las Vegas ownership costs can add up quickly. Account for summer electric bills, HOA dues, pool service, solar payments, insurance, landscaping, and fuel costs.
- Review your PCS allowances early. Depending on your orders, you may be eligible for reimbursements or allowances such as:
- Dislocation Allowance (DLA) – Helps offset the miscellaneous costs of relocating a household during a PCS move, such as setup expenses at the new duty station.
- Temporary Lodging Expense (TLE) – Helps partially cover lodging and meal costs while a service member or dependents stay in temporary lodging during a CONUS PCS move.
- Monetary Allowance in Lieu of Transportation (MALT) – Mileage reimbursement for service members and dependents who use a privately owned vehicle during a PCS move.
- Don’t assume every cost is covered. PCS benefits can offset parts of the move, but families often still need cash upfront for hotels, deposits, inspections, storage, pet boarding, utility setup, and meals before reimbursement arrives.
- Ask about VA appraisal requirements. Homes with major repair issues, roof problems, unsafe systems, or deferred maintenance can delay financing. That matters when your closing date is tied to a report date.
- Confirm details with finance. Allowance rules, caps, and eligibility can change. Before planning around reimbursements, verify the current rules with your finance office.
Choose the moving method that fits your needs

A smooth PCS move starts with the right paperwork, a clear budget, and local guidance before you make an offer.
How you move affects your arrival timeline, upfront costs, and how much control you have before settling into your Las Vegas home. For a military relocation, these are your main options:
- A government-arranged move is ideal for families with a full household, young children, limited leave, or little appetite for managing the logistics themselves. The military coordinates the packing, loading, and transportation, but you still need to track weight limits, pickup dates, delivery windows, and communication with the Traffic Management Office.
- A Personally Procured Move (PPM) is best for service members with a smaller household, flexible travel time, reliable help, and enough cash to cover costs upfront. This option gives you more control over timing, but it also means managing things like receipts, truck rentals, and reimbursement paperwork by yourself.
- A Partial PPM is good for most families who want the heavy furniture handled by the government but prefer to keep essentials with them. This works especially well if you are traveling with pets, children, valuables, uniforms, medical items, school records, or closing documents.
Find your new home in Las Vegas before your PCS report date
A successful military relocation to Las Vegas has several moving parts and it can be tough to stay on top of each one.
You can make your transition smoother when you work with a top military relocation specialist. As a top 1% Las Vegas Realtor and having been part of a military family myself for 25 years, I understand the distinct challenges that come with a PCS move.
Let’s make your transition to Las Vegas a breeze. Get in touch with me, Loralee Wood, at 702.419.3212 or via email to get started.