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Relocating to Oregon: a 90-day VA loan timeline for military buyers

Oregon has no major active-duty base, so most military moves here are Guard, Reserve, Coast Guard, or a Veteran relocating after separation. Whether you are headed to the 142nd Wing at Portland Air National Guard Base, the 173rd Fighter Wing at Kingsley Field in Klamath Falls, Camp Rilea on the coast, or a Coast Guard billet on the Columbia River, the home-buying timeline runs about the same. This is what to do when, so you land in Oregon with your VA loan ready to go.

Where military buyers land in Oregon

Because there is no single gate to commute to, your location is driven by your unit, your job, or simply where you want to put down roots. The most common landing spots:

90 days out: financial preparation

The earliest a productive PCS preparation can start is when you receive amendable orders. Even before that, if you know your next assignment, you can prepare.

60-75 days out: pick your Oregon area

Without a single gate to anchor to, your search comes down to your unit's location, your job, schools, and budget. Oregon metros vary widely on price and inventory. Identify what matters to your family:

A scouting trip during this window pays off. Visit neighborhoods at the times of day your family will actually use them, and check winter conditions if you are looking at Bend, Klamath Falls, or the Cascade foothills.

45-60 days out: get under contract

Once you have a property identified, a strong VA offer in Oregon typically includes:

30-45 days out: appraisal + inspection

The VA appraisal in Oregon typically completes within 7-14 days of order. The home inspection runs in parallel. If the inspection turns up items that the VA appraiser will also flag (roof life, HVAC age, water heater condition), those are negotiation points with the seller.

15-30 days out: clear underwriting

Underwriting works through documentation, debt-to-income calculations, and asset verification. Common things that pop up in PCS transactions:

0-15 days out: close on the home

Final walkthrough, closing disclosure, signing. If you are deployed or on orders at closing, your spouse or a designated power of attorney can sign in your absence, but the POA has to be drafted correctly. We have handled this many times for service members moving to Oregon.

Common questions

Should I rent for the first 6 months and then buy?

It depends. If your target market is appreciating quickly, waiting six months can cost real money. If you are unsure about neighborhoods, a short-term rental during the search can be worth the friction. We have clients who did each. There is no single right answer.

My move is in 60 days but I have not been to Oregon yet. Can I buy site-unseen?

Yes, with good representation. Many Oregon buyer agents are used to working with service members and Veterans who cannot visit until move time. Video walkthroughs, detailed photos, and trusted local eyes make site-unseen purchases workable.

What if my orders change mid-process?

It happens. Communicating early and often with the lender, agent, and seller is the difference between an orderly delay and a transaction that falls apart.