

If you are using a VA loan to buy in the Phoenix Metro -- whether that is Goodyear, Peoria, Surprise, or Buckeye -- the VA appraisal is mandatory, the standard home inspection is not, and confusing those two facts will cost you. The VA appraisal evaluates market value and confirms the property meets the VA's Minimum Property Requirements (MPRs). It does not evaluate every system in the house. Skipping an independent inspection on top of the appraisal is how veterans end up discovering expensive mechanical failures after keys are in hand. The Phoenix Regional Loan Center handles VA appraisals for the entire Metro area, and the Maricopa County 2025 VA loan limit sits at $806,500 -- though borrowers with full entitlement face no county cap at all.
The VA does not use the word "inspection" the way most buyers use it. Here is the actual structure of what happens when a VA loan is involved in a Phoenix-area purchase.
A VA appraisal is ordered by your lender after a purchase agreement is signed. The VA assigns an independent, VA-certified appraiser who performs two functions: determining the property's fair market value, and verifying that the home meets the VA's Minimum Property Requirements. The appraiser issues a Notice of Value (NOV) that is valid for six months. If the home has MPR deficiencies, they show up on the NOV as required repairs that must be cleared before the loan can close.
A home inspection is a separate, buyer-initiated process. It is not required by the VA. A licensed inspector does a far more detailed evaluation -- roof, HVAC, plumbing, electrical, foundation, drainage -- and produces a condition report that the VA appraiser is not obligated to generate. The typical cost in the Phoenix Metro runs $300 to $500 depending on home size and property type.
The VA Phoenix Regional Loan Center states explicitly: VA does not guarantee the CONDITION of the house you are buying. VA guarantees only the LOAN. That is not a bureaucratic caveat. It is an instruction to order the independent inspection regardless of whether the appraisal clears.
Arizona VA Appraisal Cost Range (2025-2026): $650 to $750 for a standard single-family home in Maricopa County
Re-inspection fee (if MPR repairs are required): approximately $150
Standard appraisal timeline: 7 to 10 business days from assignment
Maricopa County 2025 VA Loan Limit: $806,500 (no cap for borrowers with full entitlement)
The anxiety most VA buyers bring into this process is not about the paperwork. It is about control. A conventional buyer negotiates repairs and moves on. A VA buyer carries the additional variable of the NOV -- a government-issued document that can halt a closing if required repairs are not completed, documented, and reinspected on schedule.
In the West Valley's competitive price ranges, sellers do not always welcome VA offers the way they welcome conventional buyers with waived inspection contingencies. That reputation is partly earned and partly myth. Well-priced, well-maintained homes in Goodyear, Peoria, and Surprise pass VA appraisals routinely. The actual risk is not the VA process -- it is landing on a home with pre-existing MPR issues in a market where sellers have other options.
The answer is not to avoid using the VA benefit. The answer is to pre-screen properties before the offer goes in.
The VA's MPRs are organized around three standards: the property must be safe, sanitary, and structurally sound. The appraiser is not grading aesthetics or personal taste. Cosmetic issues, minor deferred maintenance, and normal wear and tear do not generate required repairs. The things that trigger NOV conditions fall into predictable categories.
Structural integrity. Major foundation settlement, large cracks, or structural defects can stop the approval and generate significant delays due to repair timelines and contractor documentation requirements.
Roofing. The roof must be weather-tight with reasonable remaining useful life. In the Phoenix Metro, where intense UV exposure and monsoon seasons stress roofing materials differently than cooler climates, a roof in the 15-20 year range deserves a pre-offer licensed roofer assessment before the appraiser arrives.
Electrical and plumbing systems. Exposed wiring, overloaded panels, knob-and-tube wiring, and non-functional plumbing are flagged as safety hazards. Missing GFCI outlet coverage and loose handrails are common low-cost conditions that delay closings unnecessarily -- fix them before the appraisal appointment.
Utilities and accessibility. Utilities must be on and operational at the time of the appraisal. In the West Valley, where sellers of vacant properties sometimes turn off utilities to reduce carrying costs, this scheduling detail kills timelines when ignored.
Drainage and lot condition. The lot must direct water away from the foundation. Pooling water or drainage toward the structure triggers conditions -- most relevant to older in-fill properties and homes where landscaping has shifted over time.
Pest and wood-destroying organisms. Active termite infestation, dry rot, or fungal damage affecting structural integrity is flagged. Arizona's termite pressure is real -- Maricopa County carries one of the higher subterranean termite pressure ratings in the country. A Wood-Destroying Organism (WDO) report ordered before the appraisal removes this variable from the NOV.
Pool and safety barriers. In Phoenix-area homes with pools -- common in Goodyear's Estrella Mountain Ranch, Peoria's Vistancia, and throughout the West Valley -- the appraiser checks pool fence and gate hardware for code compliance. A missing self-latching mechanism or barrier gap is an easy fix that becomes a timeline problem when discovered after the NOV is issued.
| MPR Category | Common Phoenix-Area Trigger | Pre-Offer Action |
|---|---|---|
| Roofing | UV and monsoon-stressed roofs 15+ years old | Get a licensed roofer's condition assessment |
| Electrical | Missing GFCIs, exposed wiring, older panels | Note at showing; fix before appraisal |
| Pool barriers | Gate hardware, latch gaps, fence compliance | Check municipal pool barrier code |
| Pest / WDO | Subterranean termite pressure across Maricopa County | Order WDO report with home inspection |
| Utilities | Vacant seller properties with utilities off | Confirm utility activation before appraisal date |
| Drainage | Older properties with shifted landscaping | Walk perimeter at showing; flag pooling |
A failed MPR does not automatically kill the deal. It generates a conditions list on the NOV. From there, buyers have three main paths.
Seller completes the repairs. The cleanest outcome but not guaranteed. Sellers are not required to make repairs. In a market where a seller has multiple offers, a VA buyer requesting MPR repairs on top of negotiating price is carrying more friction than a competing offer. The solution is to identify likely MPR conditions before the offer and address them in the contract -- requiring repairs before appraisal or negotiating concessions that cover the cost.
Buyer completes the repairs. The VA allows buyers to pay for MPR repairs, though not every lender permits this. Verify your lender's policy before getting into contract on a home with obvious deficiencies.
Buyer walks. Every VA contract contains an escape clause allowing exit without penalty if the property does not meet MPRs and no resolution is reached. Do not let deal fatigue push you into closing on a property the VA itself flagged as problematic.
Rate-Lock Timing Alert: Every round of required repairs adds labor scheduling, documentation, and a re-inspection step to the timeline. In the Phoenix Metro's busy spring and fall closing seasons, contractor availability compresses quickly. When a NOV comes back with conditions, treat it as a project management situation -- scope the repairs immediately, get a licensed contractor scheduled same day, and do not wait for the final week of your financing contingency to start the clock.
Goodyear, Litchfield Park, and western Glendale absorb a significant share of Luke Air Force Base personnel and military family buyers operating within PCS timelines, BAH windows, and rate-lock deadlines that leave little margin for appraisal re-inspection cycles.
The strategic play is not to avoid properties with potential MPR issues -- it is to surface them earlier and sequence the transaction around them.
Arizona also offers a property tax exemption for honorably discharged veterans with a service-connected disability. A 100% service-connected rating qualifies for a full exemption on the veteran's ownership interest in a primary residence. Verify eligibility with the Maricopa County Assessor before closing.
Surprise, Goodyear, and North Peoria are among the most active submarkets for VA buyers because of their newer housing stock, which passes MPR checks with minimal conditions. A home built in 2018 in Buckeye or 2020 in Surprise starts the VA appraisal process with far less MPR exposure than a 1985 resale in central Phoenix.
If your timeline is compressed and tied to a PCS order or BAH window, prioritize new or newer construction or well-maintained resale stock in the 2005-and-newer range. If your timeline has flexibility and you are targeting older neighborhoods for lot size or location advantages, build contractor relationships early and treat the MPR process as a negotiating tool rather than an obstacle.
The VA benefit -- zero down, no PMI, competitive rates -- is one of the most significant financial advantages available to Phoenix-area buyers in the $500,000 to $806,500 price range. The inspection process is the price of admission. Running it correctly is a logistics problem, not a reason to avoid the benefit.
Ron and Jill work regularly with VA buyers across Goodyear, Peoria, Surprise, Litchfield Park, and Buckeye. Schedule a VA Home Buyer consultation below.
👥 Agent ReferralRon Guzman | Sold By Ron & Jill Group | Licensed with Keller Williams Arizona Realty | 4236 N Verrado Way, Suite 102, Buckeye AZ 85396 | Equal Housing Opportunity | Each Keller Williams office is independently owned and operated.