Cannon AFB vs Fort Johnson
Air Force, NM vs Army, LA
Cannon AFB: "AFSOC's Punishment Assignment Has a Great Mission, We Promise." Fort Johnson: "The Army's Proof That God Has a Sense of Humor." Different branches, same dawning realization: the duty station changed you more than you changed it.
Cannon AFB's forecast: Semi-arid — hot summers, cold winters, windy. Fort Johnson's: Hot, humid, and buggy year-round. Pack for both. Complain about both. That's the tradition. Cost of living at both: low. If you can't build savings at either of these, the zip code isn't the problem. Mission-wise: Cannon AFB is about AFSOC — 27th SOW and Special operations. Fort Johnson is about JRTC (Joint Readiness Training Center) and Opposing Force (OPFOR). The lifestyle around those missions is where these two truly diverge. Off-post: Cannon AFB puts you near Clovis, NM (10 min). Fort Johnson puts you near Leesville, LA (10 min). That difference compounds over a 2–3 year tour.
Different flags in the parking lot, same look on every face after six months: equal parts proud, exhausted, and mildly surprised they made it.
By the Numbers
2026 · DFASWhere the structured table tells you what; this tells you how much.
The Read
What nobody bothers to tell you until you arrive.
Cannon is AFSOC's quietest factory. The 27th SOW flies CV-22, AC-130J, MC-130J, and MQ-9 — meaning maintainers, aircrew, intel, and SOF support churn through here on a constant deployment-and-train cycle that does not show up in OSI's day-to-day press releases. If you wanted into SOF aviation without the Hurlburt visibility, this is the path. The trade-off is geography. Clovis is honest-to-God remote. Lubbock is two hours east, Albuquerque is three-and-a-half hours west, and there is nothing meaningful in between except the wind. The wind is real — not a complaint, a planning input. Dust gets into everything; ground emergencies on the flight line are real; spring sandstorms can ground operations and ruin a car's paint in an afternoon. The cost of living is the offsetting reality: 3-bedroom rents in Clovis run $700–$1,000, Portales (20 min east) goes even lower, and Cannon's BAH math — E-5 with deps is $1,593 — actually works because the rents work. SOF community is famously tight here precisely because there's no off-base alternative draw. People train together, deploy together, drink together, raise kids together. The Buddy Holly Center is the closest thing to an outside cultural attraction. Carlsbad Caverns is a three-hour day trip and worth it. Bring a project — woodworking, hunting, motorcycles, ham radio, anything — because the assignment punishes idleness and rewards depth.
Fort Polk — officially redesignated Fort Johnson on June 13, 2023, per the recommendations of the congressional Naming Commission established under Section 370 of the FY2021 NDAA (in honor of WWI Medal of Honor recipient Sergeant William Henry Johnson) — is one of two structural Combat Training Center (CTC) installations in the Army CONUS, alongside Fort Irwin (NTC) in California. The Joint Readiness Training Center (JRTC) is the Army's light / airborne / SOF / brigade-combat-team rotational training venue, hosting roughly 10 BCT-level rotations per year plus SOF-specific rotations and joint exercises. The Operations Group (OPS GP) — the JRTC institutional cadre of Observer-Controller / Trainers (OC/Ts) — and the 1st Battalion (Geronimo, OPFOR — the 509th Infantry Regiment that serves as the structural opposing force for every rotation) define the installation's permanent-party identity. Bayne-Jones Army Community Hospital is the MTF. The honest cultural distinction every PCS-bound family must internalize: Fort Johnson is two installations in one. You're either an OC/T or OPFOR Soldier who lives at Fort Johnson and works rotations (12-14-day exercises in the JRTC Box, with rotational tempo continuously), or you're an outside rotational unit that visits Fort Johnson 1-2 times per career. The OC/T population works on the rotational training schedule (back-to-back rotations during peak training cycles, with intensive field time and limited family-presence during the 12-14-day rotation windows). BAH for MHA LA115 — E-5 with deps is $1,218 against off-post Leesville / DeRidder 3BR rents of $600-$900, structurally generous on the dollar math but the cost-of-living advantage is offset by the structural lack of off-post amenities and the spouse-employment desert. Louisiana state income tax is graduated 1.85% / 3.5% / 4.25% (CY2025 per LA Dept of Revenue, top bracket above $50K joint), but the FY2025 reform (per Act 11 of 2024 Second ES) replaces graduated brackets with a 3.0% flat individual income tax effective 2025 tax year — net effect for active-duty SMs is modest reduction. No-tax-state SLR (TX / FL / TN) remains the standard senior-NCO / officer play. The honest local picture: Leesville (population ~6,000) is structurally limited — Walmart, a few restaurants, the basic services, and not much else. Alexandria, LA (1 hr east) is the regional small city. The cultural consolation is Louisiana: New Orleans (3 hrs SE) and Lafayette (2 hrs SE — Cajun country) are genuine weekend escapes; Toledo Bend Reservoir (30 min west) is world-class largemouth and striped bass fishing; Kisatchie National Forest (the piney-woods landscape) wraps the installation. The summer heat / humidity / mosquito reality is structural April through October.
Pros & Cons
- +Tight-knit SOF community
- +Low cost of living
- +Beautiful New Mexico sunsets
- -Clovis is extremely isolated
- -Nearest real city is Lubbock (2 hrs)
- -Wind and dust
- +Unique JRTC training experience
- +Low cost of living
- +Hunting and fishing
- -Consistently rated worst duty station
- -Leesville is tiny
- -Swamp heat and mosquitoes
Real Talk
What you’ll actually deal with. The structured table above is the brief — this is the back-channel.
Balfour Beatty privatized housing on base — short waitlists, modern units. Off-base in Clovis is dirt cheap and adequate. Portales (20 min, home of Eastern New Mexico University) is the slightly-quieter alternative with the same price point. The wind affects vehicles and structures meaningfully — garage parking matters more here than at most assignments.
Clovis Municipal Schools are adequate but not standout. Portales Municipal is similar. ENMU in Portales is a real option for spouse degree completion at in-state pricing. No DoDEA. Most career-focused families adapt; for kids with specific academic-acceleration needs the options are thin.
27th SOW runs hot — AFSOC tempo is real, deployments rotate steadily, and the SOF cultural intensity is the same as Hurlburt without the off-base distractions. If you came to fly or fix SOF airframes, you'll have the work. If you wanted a quiet PCS, this isn't it.
An assignment that punishes people who need an off-base lifestyle and rewards people who came to do SOF aviation work. The finances are friendly, the community is tight, and the isolation is the price.
Corvias on-post PPV — limited family inventory but waitlists are typically short (1-3 months) given the structural low-demand environment. Off-post: Leesville (closest, basic services, Vernon Parish Schools) is the convenient option; DeRidder (20 min south, slightly larger small-town, Beauregard Parish Schools) is the modestly-upscale alternative; Anacoco / Hornbeck (small communities NW of the installation) are the affordable rural options; Alexandria (1 hr east) is the larger small-city option but the commute is significant. Most permanent-party families live on-post or in Leesville for proximity.
Vernon Parish Public Schools (the Leesville-area public district) is structurally under-resourced compared to most state averages — Leesville HS, Pickering HS, and the Vernon Parish elementary feeders are functional but the education-quality trade-off is real, and is the single most consistent family-complaint about the Fort Johnson assignment. Many career families with school-age children explore charter or private options, or schedule PCS timing to align with a future-assignment school window. DeRidder Beauregard Parish schools are modestly better. No DoDEA at Fort Johnson.
JRTC rotation tempo is structural — roughly 10 BCT-level rotations per year plus SOF and joint rotations, with 12-14-day exercise windows in the JRTC training area (the Box). OC/T cadre work the rotational cycle — back-to-back rotations during peak training months, with intensive field time and limited family-presence during exercise windows. OPS GP work patterns are similarly rotation-driven. Permanent-party deployment tempo (separate from rotational training) is generally lower than line-FORSCOM units. The cultural environment is structurally focused on the rotational-training mission — the JRTC cadre identity is the dominant cultural signal.
One of two structural Army CTCs, with the institutional credential for the OC/T and OPFOR cadre that shapes light-Army training. The trades are the structurally limited off-post environment (Leesville reality), Vernon Parish schools, the structural spouse-employment desert, and the Louisiana summer reality (heat / humidity / mosquitoes April-October).
Who Thrives Here
Not every base is for every service member. Match yourself to the room.
- AFSOC AVIATION CAREERISTS
CV-22, AC-130J, MC-130J, MQ-9 maintainers and aircrew get deep, repeated experience here. The 27th SOW is where you log the hours that translate into a follow-on AFSOC career.
- FINANCIAL-DISCIPLINE FAMILIES
BAH-to-rent ratio is among the most favorable in the AF — you can save aggressively if you're single-income, or live well on under-market spending. Nothing to spend money on is half a feature.
- HUNTING AND OUTDOOR-RECREATION TYPES
Eastern New Mexico plains hunting (pronghorn, mule deer, waterfowl, prairie chicken), shooting access, and remote-country exploration are real here. The land is the reward.
- JRTC OC/T CADRE
Observer-Controller / Trainer (OC/T) assignment at JRTC is the institutional credential for the Army's senior light-infantry / airborne / SOF NCOs and officers — the OC/T pipeline shapes how the entire light Army trains and fights. Career signal for the leader-development cadre community is structural.
- GERONIMO / OPFOR (1-509TH INFANTRY)
The 1st Battalion, 509th Infantry Regiment (Geronimo) is the structural OPFOR for every JRTC rotation. Career-signal for the light-infantry NCO / officer professional environment is real — the OPFOR mission produces a uniquely-skilled tactical cadre.
- OUTDOORS / HUNTING / FISHING FAMILIES
Toledo Bend Reservoir bass fishing, Kisatchie National Forest hunting and hiking, Louisiana waterfowl season, and the broader Gulf-South outdoors environment is structural. Families who embrace the outdoor reality navigate the assignment significantly better.
- DOLLAR-MAXIMIZER FINANCIAL-DISCIPLINE FAMILIES
Structurally generous BAH-to-rent ratio + low Louisiana cost-of-living + limited spending opportunities = strong financial-discipline tour. Senior NCOs and officers who PCS through Fort Johnson banking BAH-savings differential build real net-worth during the assignment.
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