March 2026 · 13 min read

How to Manage a Rental Property While in the Military (PCS Landlord Guide)

You got PCS orders. Selling in a hurry means losing equity. Renting it out makes financial sense — but managing a property from your next duty station (or overseas) feels overwhelming. Here's how to do it right.

Military families are some of the most common "accidental landlords" in America. You buy a home at your duty station, get PCS orders 2-3 years later, and face a choice: sell (often at a loss if the market hasn't cooperated) or rent it out and keep building equity.

Renting is usually the smarter financial move. But it creates a new challenge: managing a rental property from potentially thousands of miles away, while also dealing with deployments, training schedules, and the general chaos of military life.

The good news? Remote property management is easier than it's ever been. With the right setup, you can manage a rental from Okinawa as easily as from across town. This guide covers everything military landlords need to know — from legal protections to practical management systems.

Should You Rent or Sell When You PCS?

Before we get into management, let's address the threshold question. Renting makes sense when:

Selling makes more sense when:

SCRA: Legal Protections You Need to Know

The Servicemembers Civil Relief Act (SCRA) provides important protections for military members — and it affects you both as a landlord AND if you're renting at your new station.

As a Landlord (What Your Tenants Can Do)

If your tenant is an active-duty service member who receives PCS orders or deployment orders, they can:

You cannot refuse this. It's federal law. If you rent near a military base, expect this to happen. Plan for it by keeping your property rent-ready and maintaining a short tenant search timeline.

As a Renter (Your Protections at Your New Station)

When you PCS and rent at your new duty station, you have the same SCRA protections. If you get PCS orders again, you can break that lease with 30 days' notice. This gives you flexibility to rent confidently knowing you won't be stuck in a lease if orders change.

Other SCRA Protections

Setting Up Your Property for Remote Management

Before You Leave: The Preparation Checklist

  1. Switch your insurance. Convert from homeowners to landlord/rental property insurance. Standard homeowners policies don't cover rental use. This is critical — if you don't switch and a tenant causes damage, your claim may be denied.
  2. Notify your mortgage lender. Most conventional loans require owner occupancy. Technically, renting without lender approval could trigger a due-on-sale clause. In practice, most lenders don't enforce this — especially for military PCS — but it's better to notify them and get written approval.
  3. Set up a property-specific bank account. All rental income and expenses through one account. This makes accounting simple and keeps rental finances separate from personal finances.
  4. Build your vendor list. Before you leave, identify and vet: a general handyman, plumber, electrician, HVAC technician, and a locksmith. Get their contact info and establish a relationship. When something breaks at 2 AM and you're in a different time zone, you need to be able to call someone you trust.
  5. Document the property condition. Walk through every room with video and photos. Document the condition of every surface, appliance, and fixture. This is your baseline for the security deposit return.
  6. Set up digital management tools. You need digital rent collection, digital lease signing, and a maintenance request system. Everything has to work remotely — no dropping by to pick up a check or inspect a repair.

Manage your rental from anywhere

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Finding a Tenant Before You Leave

Ideally, you find a tenant before your PCS date. This means starting 60-90 days before you move.

Timeline

Military-Specific Listing Tips

Remote Rent Collection

Cash and checks don't work when you're 2,000 miles away. Set up digital payments from day one.

Best Options for Military Landlords

Whatever method you choose, set up automatic late fees. You can't afford to personally track payment dates across time zones.

Remote Maintenance Management

This is the #1 concern for military landlords: "What happens when something breaks and I'm not there?"

The System That Works

  1. Tenant submits request digitally (app, text, or email — not a phone call you miss during a field exercise)
  2. You triage remotely. Is it urgent (water leak, no heat, gas smell)? Tell the tenant to call your emergency vendor directly. Is it routine? Schedule a vendor visit.
  3. Vendor handles it. Your pre-vetted handyman or specialist goes to the property, fixes the issue, sends you photos and an invoice.
  4. You pay and document. Pay the vendor, log the expense, file the receipt. All digital, all from your phone.

Emergency Authorization

Give your tenant clear instructions for emergencies:

Set a pre-authorized spending limit with your vendors — e.g., "Fix anything under $300 without calling me first." This prevents delays when you're in the field or on a different continent.

Property Manager vs. Self-Management

Many military landlords default to hiring a property management company. This works, but it's not always the best choice:

Property Manager Pros

Property Manager Cons

Self-Management With Digital Tools

With the right tools, most military landlords can self-manage a single rental property remotely. The key requirements:

This setup costs $7-9/month with Rentlane, compared to $150-250/month for a property manager on a $1,500/month rental. Over a 3-year PCS assignment, that's $5,400-8,700 saved.

Tax Considerations for Military Landlords

The Military Landlord Playbook

  1. Before PCS: Switch insurance, set up digital management, build vendor list, find tenant, document property
  2. During assignment: Collect rent digitally, handle maintenance remotely via vendors, do quarterly check-ins with a local contact
  3. At next PCS: Evaluate — keep renting, sell, or buy another property at your new station and repeat

Many military families build portfolios of 3-5 rental properties over a 20-year career, each purchased with VA loan benefits at different duty stations. The key is having systems that work remotely so the properties don't become a second job.

Disclaimer: Information in this article is for general educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, tax, or military advice. SCRA provisions and VA loan requirements are summarized here but may have nuances not covered. Consult a military-friendly attorney, CPA, and your lender for advice specific to your situation. Laws and regulations change; verify current requirements before acting.

PCS-proof your rental management

Rentlane works from anywhere — rent collection, e-signatures, maintenance tracking, all from your phone. 14-day free trial — all features included. Pro starts at $9/mo.

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