$3,500 BAH? Here’s What You Can Afford

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Written by PJ Burns

Published April 13, 2025

What a $3,500 Monthly Budget Can Buy You Near Quantico with a VA Loan

If you’re heading to Quantico and thinking about buying, that $3,500 number probably looks familiar. Most military families I work with have BAH in that range—give or take—so we’ll use that as the baseline here. Whether you’re buying your first home or you’ve done this once or twice before, the question is always the same: Can we actually get something decent around here without going over budget?

The short answer? Yes, you can. But there’s more to it than just checking the list price on Zillow and hoping for the best. Monthly cost comes from more than just the loan. You have to factor in the whole picture—otherwise you end up house-poor, and that’s not a smart financial decision.

$3,500 a Month: What’s Included?

Before we get into the home prices and loan numbers, there’s one thing worth breaking down first: PITI. It stands for Principal, Interest, Taxes, and Insurance. That’s your full monthly housing payment—not just the mortgage. It’s what actually comes out of your account every month when you own a home.

Here’s how it works:

  • Principal is the part of your payment that goes toward paying off the loan balance.
  • Interest is what you pay the lender for borrowing the money.
  • Taxes refer to property taxes paid to the county or city where the home sits.
  • Insurance covers your homeowners insurance policy.

Together, that makes up your true monthly cost. So when I say “$3,500 mortgage,” I’m not just talking about the loan—we’re including all of that.

Assumptions Behind the Numbers

To support the math equations, I will assume you are using a VA loan for the first time with 0% down. You will request for the VA funding fee (2.15% for first-time use) to get wrapped into the loan, so there is less money out of pocket upfront. We’re assuming a 30-year fixed loan with a 6.5% interest rate, which is right around where rates have been for the past year. These numbers may shift slightly, but this keeps us in the real-world ballpark.

For property taxes and insurance, I’m using Stafford County as the reference point—specifically zip code 22556. Property taxes here are about 1% annually, and homeowners insurance in the area typically runs close to $1,200 a year. These are good averages for estimating monthly costs when you’re still figuring out where exactly you’ll land.

What can $3,500 get you?

With all that in place, a monthly PITI payment of $3,500 puts you in a home priced around $466,000. Once the VA funding fee gets added, your total loan amount lands around $476,485.

That loan gives you a monthly principal and interest payment of roughly $3,011. Property taxes add about $388, and insurance adds around $100 more. So your full monthly cost comes to $3,500. This is not a guess—it’s a real number based on the way these loans and local costs actually work.

That kind of budget gives you access to a range of good options—updated townhomes, newer builds, and well-kept single-family homes within a short drive to Quantico.

Why the Monthly Number Matters More Than the Loan Size

Here’s where a lot of buyers get tripped up. A lender might pre-approve you for $600,000, but that doesn’t mean you should spend that much. That number is based on max ratios and ideal conditions—not your actual day-to-day life. Remember, the bank wants you to buy the biggest house they think you can afford so they make more money.

When your PCS hits and life starts happening—surprise expenses, new schedules, maybe a deployment—stretching your budget to the limit usually doesn’t feel worth it. That’s why I always work backward from monthly costs instead of forward from a pre-approval number.

Keep in mind that the military has already set our housing allowance, so do your best to stay within that number. If $3,500 is your BAH, then that becomes the ceiling for your home search. The keyword here is ceiling, you can always move down.

If You’re Moving Soon

You don’t need to have it all figured out before reaching out. Most of the military families I work with are juggling everything—orders, timelines, leave dates—and just trying to make smart decisions under pressure. That’s normal.

Whether you’ve used your VA loan before or this is your first time buying, I can help you run the numbers, get clear on what works, and avoid the common traps.

If you want help finding a place that fits inside your budget—or you just want to run your own numbers with someone who won’t talk to you like a mortgage brochure—reach out. I’ll keep it simple and frank. No pressure, no weird sales stuff.

References:

VA.gov home loan benefits

Stafford County tax rate info