Fort Bliss vs Joint Base Lewis-McChord
Army, TX vs Army, WA
JBLM: Pacific Northwest, Mount Rainier, gray skies, expensive. Fort Bliss: Chihuahuan Desert, Pikes Peak visible from New Mexico, clear skies, cheap. Two installations that agree on almost nothing except that the other branch's post is inferior.
JBLM is I Corps, 75th Ranger Regiment, and 1st Special Forces Group positioned at the front door of the Pacific Northwest — exceptional outdoor recreation, a globally connected airport 25 minutes away, and a cost of living that has been quietly staging a Seattle-style takeover of every neighborhood within 30 miles. Fort Bliss is the 1st Armored Division and Army Air Defense in far west Texas — isolated, sunny, affordable, with El Paso providing one of the more unexpectedly authentic city experiences in the Army's portfolio. The cost comparison is stark: JBLM's housing market is high and climbing, Bliss runs genuinely low. The outdoor recreation is a matter of taste: Mount Rainier and Puget Sound versus White Sands and Franklin Mountains. One is wet and spectacular. The other is dry and spectacular.
JBLM costs more and connects you to a world-class natural environment. Bliss saves your money and drops you in a desert that rewards curiosity. Most soldiers discover their preference about three weeks after arriving.
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.
Fort Bliss is the Army's largest installation by training-area footprint (~1.12 million acres, McGregor Range stretches into NM) and the home of the 1st Armored Division — the 'Old Ironsides' — plus the Army Air Defense Artillery Center. The post is structurally configured for big-formation maneuver training in a way that no other CONUS installation matches; if you came to fight armor or air defense, this is where you learn it. 1st AD runs an active deployment and CTC cycle, with EUCOM- and CENTCOM-aligned commitments rotating brigades regularly. The ADA mission has been growing post-2023 in line with Patriot/THAAD demand globally — if you're a 14-series soldier, this is the schoolhouse and the operational home. William Beaumont Army Medical Center is one of the newest and best-equipped Army hospitals in the system (opened June 2021, replaced the legacy WBAMC) — full Level III trauma capability and unusually strong in-house specialty depth. The honest financial picture: BAH for MHA TX279 (El Paso) — E-5 with deps is $1,809 — against off-post El Paso 3BR rents of $1,000-$1,400, which is structurally generous. Texas has no state income tax, which compounds the savings. The trade-offs: El Paso is genuinely isolated (nearest major US metros are Albuquerque 4 hours and Phoenix 6 hours), the desert summer is structurally limiting June-September, dust storms during spring monsoon prep affect daily life and aviation ops, and the border culture is both an advantage (the food is genuinely some of the best in the Army) and a context most new arrivals don't fully internalize — DEA/CBP joint-task-force presence is real, the bridges to Juárez are a normal weekend option for many but require situational awareness, and OSI/CID consideration of cross-border interactions is more active here than at most posts.
JBLM is the closest the Army has to a Pacific power-projection platform on the mainland, and that shapes the assignment more than any of the brochure photos let on. I Corps is the senior headquarters and the four-star INDOPACOM-aligned operational command; 7th Infantry Division provides the conventional combat structure; 1st Special Forces Group is here (with regular deployments westbound across the Indo-Pacific); 75th Ranger Regiment's 2nd Battalion is at JBLM-Lewis. The 62nd Airlift Wing flies C-17s out of McChord and a meaningful chunk of any Pacific deployment goes through this dual-runway joint installation. INDOPACOM tempo is increasing across the entire DoD posture and JBLM is downstream of that — exercises, KASS rotations, JPMRC-X cycles, and PACAF interoperability sets put a lot of units on the road. Madigan Army Medical Center is one of the better Army MTFs and rarely forces off-post specialty referrals. The honest trade-off is cost of living: Tacoma, Lacey, and DuPont rents have surged with the Puget Sound housing market — BAH for an E-5 with deps under MHA WA311 is $2,556 (one of the highest in the conventional Army), but 3BR rents in DuPont and Steilacoom run $2,000-$2,800 routinely, and Tacoma proper goes higher. Washington has no state income tax which materially helps. Schools at Steilacoom Historical SD and North Thurston Public are well-regarded; on-post DoDEA elementaries (K-8) are strong. The weather is the local cliché: 8 months of overcast/drizzle Oct-May, then world-class July-September. The PNW outdoor-recreation lifestyle is real — Mount Rainier is in the backyard, Olympic National Park is two hours, and Crystal Mountain skiing is a day trip.
Pros & Cons
- +El Paso food scene is outstanding
- +Very affordable
- +Year-round outdoor training
- -Desert isolation
- -Dust storms
- -Far from other major cities
- +Pacific Northwest outdoor recreation
- +Seattle & Portland accessible
- +Mount Rainier backyard
- -Rain nearly every day Oct-May
- -Rising cost of living
- -Traffic on I-5
Real Talk
What you’ll actually deal with. The structured table above is the brief — this is the back-channel.
Balfour Beatty Communities (Fort Bliss Family Housing) manages on-post — multiple housing villages (Aero Vista, Cassidy, etc.); the newer construction is genuinely good, older areas vary. Waitlists shorter than at the East Coast Army posts. Off-post: NE El Paso (Edgemere/Pebble Hills/Eastlake corridor) is the consensus best for families — newer subdivisions, Socorro ISD schools, easy commute via Highway 54 and Patriot Freeway. East El Paso (Mission Valley) is closer/cheaper and adequate. Las Cruces, NM (45 min north on I-25) is the slightly-cheaper, slightly-quieter alternative; introduces NM state income tax exposure (5.9% top).
El Paso ISD (central) and Ysleta ISD (east) are mixed and population-dependent. Socorro ISD (NE El Paso, Eastlake area) and Canutillo ISD are the school upgrades that drive housing decisions for career families. Bel Air HS, Eastlake HS, and Franklin HS have solid reputations. No DoDEA at Bliss.
1st AD OPTEMPO runs heavy — brigade NTC rotations plus EUCOM and CENTCOM-aligned commitments. ADA units (11th and 31st ADA Brigades, plus the schoolhouse cycle) run their own continuous-deployment rotation supporting global Patriot commitments. Garrison units and HQ-USAFICOM (formerly USAACE-adjacent) run civilian-leaning hours.
An assignment that's structurally favorable on cost-of-living, mission depth (for armor and ADA careers), and MTF capability. Isolation and desert climate are the trade-offs; El Paso itself is genuinely better than its reputation.
Liberty Military Housing (formerly Lincoln) manages on-post — JBLM-Lewis Main and McChord housing areas; waitlists are real (3-6 months for family housing) but the stock has been refreshed over the last decade and is generally good. Off-post: DuPont is the closest, walkable to McChord side, premium-priced. Lakewood is closer/cheaper and uneven (vary by neighborhood — Tillicum struggles, Lake City is solid). Steilacoom is the small-town move with the best schools and water views, premium-priced. Lacey/Olympia (15-20 min south on I-5, off the worst of the Tacoma traffic) is the budget-conscious family move with good North Thurston schools.
Steilacoom Historical SD and Clover Park SD serve the immediate JBLM area — Steilacoom is the strong feeder, Clover Park is uneven. DoDEA operates on-post K-8 schools (Beachwood, Carter Lake, Clarkmoor, Evergreen, Greenwood, Hillside) — well-regarded for continuity through PCS/deployment cycles, no DoDEA high school. North Thurston Public Schools (Lacey) is the south-of-post move with strong districts (River Ridge, Timberline).
I Corps OPTEMPO is rising with INDOPACOM posture. 7th ID brigades rotate through JPMRC-X (Hawaii/Alaska Pacific Multinational Readiness Center) and CTC events. 1st SFG and Ranger 2nd Bn run their own SOF tempo. McChord airlift crews are deployed continuously supporting global airlift. Garrison-side (I Corps staff, Madigan) runs civilian-leaning hours and is calmer.
An assignment where the lifestyle (PNW outdoors + no state income tax + a real MTF) and the mission (Pacific power projection) both punch above their reputation. Cost of living is the structural tax — going in eyes-open on rent is the difference between a great tour and a strained one.
Who Thrives Here
Not every base is for every service member. Match yourself to the room.
- 1st AD ARMOR / MECH CAREERISTS
1st Armored Division is one of two remaining heavy divisions in the Army. The training-area scale plus McGregor Range integration gives 19-series, 11-series mech, and 13-series Abrams crewmen unmatched maneuver opportunities.
- ADA 14-SERIES SOLDIERS
Army ADA Center is here. Patriot, THAAD, SHORAD — the schoolhouse, the major operational units, and the career-progression assignments all sit at Bliss. ADA careers are functionally built here.
- NO-TAX-STATE BANKERS (TX SLR)
Texas has zero state income tax. BAH-to-rent ratio is favorable. Single soldiers and dual-income families bank serious money here.
- MEXICAN-FOOD / DESERT-OUTDOOR FAMILIES
El Paso's food scene is genuinely outstanding. Franklin Mountains State Park is in city limits. Hueco Tanks (climbing), White Sands NM, and Cloudcroft (NM skiing) are weekend trips. Border culture is unique.
- INDOPACOM-FOCUSED CAREERISTS
I Corps is the four-star Pacific HQ. 1st SFG, 7th ID, and 75th Ranger Regt 2nd Bn all align to Pacific theater commitments. Career signal for INDOPACOM-track assignments is strong.
- PNW OUTDOOR FAMILIES
Rainier, Olympic NP, Cascades skiing, Puget Sound kayaking and sailing, Pacific coast beaches — the outdoor recreation density is unmatched in CONUS Army.
- DUAL-INCOME TECH SPOUSES
Amazon, Microsoft, Boeing, and a deep PNW tech corridor are within Seattle-area commuting distance. Remote-work culture is mature. Spouse careers in tech, healthcare, and logistics translate well.
- NO-TAX-STATE BANKERS (WA SLR)
Washington has zero state income tax. With BAH among the highest in the conventional Army, WA SLR pulls real money to the bottom line for career SMs.
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