---
title: 'Buying a Home Sight Unseen During a PCS Move: A Military Guide'
slug: buying-a-home-sight-unseen-during-a-pcs-move
description: >-
  How military families safely buy a home sight unseen during a PCS move:
  trusted local agents, virtual tours, inspections, and contingencies. Start
  with a pro.
publishedAt: '2026-06-24T09:00:00.000Z'
updatedAt: '2026-06-18T12:00:00.000Z'
author: VeteranPCS
categories:
  - PCS Help
  - Real Estate Insights
canonical: 'https://www.veteranpcs.com/blog/buying-a-home-sight-unseen-during-a-pcs-move'
componentSlug: pcs-help
---
# Buying a Home Sight Unseen During a PCS Move: A Military Guide

Buying a home sight unseen sounds risky, but for military families it is often the smart move. When you have orders in hand and a report date a few weeks away, flying across the country to tour houses in person is rarely possible. PCS (Permanent Change of Station) moves run on short timelines, and homes in popular base towns sell fast. The good news: many service members buy homes they have never set foot in, and they do it safely by following a clear process and leaning on the right people.

This guide covers why remote buying is so common in the military, the safeguards that protect your money, and the simple steps that keep a sight-unseen purchase on track.

## Why buying a home sight unseen is so common in the military

Military life moves fast. You may get PCS orders with only a few weeks to find housing in a new city, and many families end up house hunting from hundreds of miles away while still at their current duty station.

A VA (Department of Veterans Affairs) loan works well for these purchases. There is no rule that says you must tour a home in person to use your VA loan benefit. As long as the home will be your primary residence, you can buy it remotely. VA loans generally require you to move in within 60 days of closing, though the VA allows exceptions for PCS timing and deployment. (See the [VA home buying process](https://www.va.gov/housing-assistance/home-loans/home-buying-process/) for the official steps.)

The key is replacing the in-person walkthrough with safeguards that do the same job.

## The safeguards that make a remote purchase safe

Buying from a distance is not about trusting a few photos and hoping for the best. It is about stacking protections so that if something is wrong, you find out before you are locked in.

### A trusted local buyer's agent who tours for you

Your agent is your eyes and ears on the ground. The best ones walk through each home on a live video call with you, opening closets, running faucets, pointing the camera at the roofline, and showing you the street and the yard. A live tour is far more honest than a polished listing video, because you control where the camera points and you can ask questions in real time.

Pick an agent who knows your base and has closed VA loan purchases recently. Ask how many VA loans they have helped close in the past year. For more on vetting, read [how to choose the right real estate agent for your military PCS move](/blog/how-to-choose-the-right-real-estate-agent-for-your-military-pcs-move). When you are ready, you can [find a military-experienced VeteranPCS agent](https://www.veteranpcs.com/contact-agent) who understands remote buyers.

### A home inspection (and an inspection contingency)

A home inspection is your deepest look at the property's condition. An inspector checks the roof, foundation, plumbing, electrical, and heating and cooling systems, then gives you a detailed report. The VA strongly recommends an inspection before you buy, and you should never skip it just to speed things up. When you are buying sight unseen, it matters even more, because you cannot spot problems yourself.

Pair the inspection with an inspection contingency in your contract. This clause lets you back out, or ask the seller to make repairs, if the inspection turns up major issues, without losing your deposit.

### The VA appraisal protects value, but it is not an inspection

If you use a VA loan, a VA-approved appraiser will visit the home. The appraisal does two things: it sets the home's reasonable value so you are not overpaying, and it confirms the home meets the VA's basic Minimum Property Requirements for safety. The VA is clear that an appraisal is not the same as a home inspection. The appraisal protects the lender and the loan; the inspection protects you. You need both.

The VA also recommends that your contract include the "VA escape clause," which lets you void the deal if the home does not appraise for the contract price.

## How to buy a home sight unseen, step by step

![Six-step process for buying a home sight unseen during a PCS: hire a trusted local agent, take live video tours, research the neighborhood, write strong contingencies, get an inspection and VA appraisal, and review everything before closing.](/images/blog/buying-a-home-sight-unseen-during-a-pcs-move/sight-unseen-steps.png)

*A safe, repeatable process for buying sight unseen during a PCS move.*

Here is a simple, repeatable process that keeps a remote purchase on track.

### 1. Get pre-approved and line up your team

Before you shop, get a pre-approval letter from a VA-experienced lender. It tells you your budget, strengthens your offer, and surfaces any problems with your Certificate of Eligibility early. Use this time to pick your local agent too. To see who else belongs on your side, read about the [VA loan home buying team and who you need to know](/blog/va-loan-home-buying-team-who-you-need-to-know).

### 2. Research the neighborhood from afar

You can learn a lot about an area without visiting. Check commute times to your base, look up local school ratings, and review crime and safety maps for the streets you are considering. The VA itself suggests weighing your commute and the quality of local schools when comparing homes. Ask your agent the questions databases cannot answer, like noise, flooding history, and what the block is really like.

### 3. Take live video tours

Have your agent walk each finalist home on a live video call. Ask them to show the things photos hide: water stains, the age of appliances, the condition of the yard, and how close the neighbors sit. Record the calls if you can, so you can compare homes later.

### 4. Write strong contingencies into your offer

Contingencies are your exit ramps. The three most important are the inspection contingency, the appraisal contingency, and the financing contingency. Together they let you walk away, or renegotiate, if the home has hidden problems, appraises low, or your loan falls through. When buying sight unseen, do not waive them to look more competitive. For ways to make a strong offer without dropping your protections, see [how to leverage seller concessions to lower your closing costs](/blog/how-to-leverage-seller-concessions-to-lower-your-closing-costs).

### 5. Understand earnest money and escrow

When your offer is accepted, you will put down earnest money, often 1 to 2 percent of the price, as a good-faith deposit. That money sits in an escrow account held by a neutral third party, like a title company, until closing. If a contingency is not met, you typically get the earnest money back. If you walk away for no covered reason, you can lose it.

### 6. Get the inspection and VA appraisal, then review everything

Order the home inspection and let the VA appraisal proceed. Read both reports closely with your agent, and use what you learn to ask for repairs, renegotiate, or exit through a contingency. Before closing, read your Closing Disclosure, which your lender must send at least three business days ahead. Then close, often with a power of attorney if you cannot sign in person.

## Have a fallback plan for the move itself

Even a smooth remote purchase can slip a few days, and your move-in window may not line up perfectly with your report date. Give yourself a cushion. Look into on-base lodging or a short-term rental so you have a place to stay if you arrive before you can move in. A flexible landing spot turns a stressful gap into a minor one. For the bigger picture on timing, see [the ultimate PCS checklist and timeline for active-duty military personnel](/blog/the-ultimate-pcs-checklist-and-timeline-for-active-duty-military-personnel).

## Frequently asked questions

### Can I really use my VA loan to buy a home I have never seen?

Yes. The VA loan program does not require you to tour a home in person. As long as it will be your primary residence and meets the VA's property requirements, you can buy it remotely. Many military families do exactly that.

### Is the VA appraisal enough, or do I still need a home inspection?

You still need a home inspection. The VA appraisal sets the home's value and confirms basic safety standards, but it is not a detailed look at condition. The VA itself says an appraisal is not the same as an inspection. The appraisal protects the loan; the inspection protects you from costly surprises after you move in.

### What protects my deposit if I cannot see the home first?

Your contingencies do. An inspection, appraisal, and financing contingency each give you a way to cancel the deal and get your earnest money back if something goes wrong, while the deposit sits safely in escrow.

## Ready to buy with confidence?

Buying a home sight unseen does not have to feel like a gamble. With live video tours, a full inspection, the VA appraisal, and solid contingencies, you can buy from across the country and still protect your money and your family. The most important step is starting with someone who has done this before. [Find a military-experienced VeteranPCS agent](https://www.veteranpcs.com/contact-agent) to tour homes for you and guide your next move.

This content is for informational purposes. Consult a professional for personal financial decisions.
