Washington Dulles (IAD)
IAD is the transatlantic alternative on the East Coast with strong international trip quality and access to Northern Virginia's excellent schools. Diane provides strategic guidance to help you evaluate whether this move fits.
Why Diane understands this decision
I share daily life with an airline captain. I understand the pilot world from the inside: the schedule, the seniority math, the short-call premium, the quality-of-life trade-offs that don't show up in a spreadsheet.
I bring structured, analytical thinking to the move-vs.-commute decision. Seniority position, family needs, financial picture, quality of life. They all factor in, and none of them have a single right answer.
Washington Dulles offers strong transatlantic trip quality and access to excellent schools across two states, but the Virginia-versus-Maryland tax decision adds a layer that matters.
Base Overview
IAD: The transatlantic alternative
Washington Dulles International Airport (IAD) is the East Coast international hub, particularly for transatlantic and European routes. IAD offers widebody trips, strong domestic connectivity, and a base that balances international seniority with East Coast positioning.
Virginia and Maryland both have state income taxes. Virginia's estimated effective rate for pilot income ($300K-$600K) is approximately 5.6% to 5.7%. Maryland's state effective rate falls in a similar range at approximately 5.3% to 5.5%, but Maryland counties add a local "piggyback" income tax on top of the state rate, pushing the combined effective rate in places like Montgomery County to roughly 8.4% to 8.7%. The DC metro area has a strong job market, excellent schools in certain counties, and a professional culture that resonates with military-transitioning pilots. Housing costs vary significantly by county and commute distance.
The Dulles corridor has transformed from a suburban outpost into a major employment center. Loudoun and Fairfax counties are among the wealthiest in the nation, with top-ranked schools and established communities designed for commuting professionals.
The Commuting Reality
What commuting into IAD actually looks like
IAD sits in the far western suburbs of the DC metro, separated from the urban core by the Dulles Toll Road corridor. This actually works in pilots' favor: the airport is closer to the suburban communities where most families live, and pilot report times typically avoid the worst of DC-area traffic.
Commuters from Maryland face the most challenging drives, crossing the Potomac on the American Legion Bridge or the Dulles Toll Road during peak hours. The commute from Montgomery County (Bethesda, Potomac) can run 45 to 60 minutes during rush hour, but drops to 30 to 35 minutes during off-peak pilot hours.
The DC metro also has one of the strongest commuter rail networks in the country. The Silver Line provides a direct connection from Fairfax and Loudoun County to Dulles, making Ashburn, Sterling, and Centreville viable for pilots who prefer not to drive. The commute from Ashburn to IAD via the Silver Line takes about 25 to 30 minutes.
Neighborhoods
Where pilots live near IAD
Ashburn & Sterling (Loudoun County)
The shortest commute to Dulles. Ashburn and Sterling sit immediately adjacent to Dulles Airport. Loudoun County has some of the best schools in Virginia, rapid growth, and a tech-professional community. Ashburn's planned communities offer modern amenities and family-friendly living. The Silver Line provides a direct transit connection.
Centreville & Chantilly (Fairfax County)
Fairfax County value. Fairfax County is home to some of the highest-ranked public schools in Virginia. Centreville and Chantilly offer more accessible pricing within the county with strong community infrastructure. The commute runs via Route 28 or the Dulles Toll Road. Popular with military-transitioning pilots who value school quality.
Bethesda & Potomac (Montgomery County, MD)
Premium living on the Maryland side. Montgomery County offers excellent schools and a polished suburban lifestyle. Bethesda provides urban amenities with suburban comfort. Potomac offers larger lots and privacy. The commute to IAD is longer but manageable during off-peak hours via the Dulles Toll Road.
Leesburg & Round Hill (Western Loudoun)
Small-town feel with short commute. Western Loudoun County offers a more rural, horse-country lifestyle with larger lots and a genuine small-town atmosphere. Leesburg has a charming historic downtown. Round Hill is quieter and more affordable. Both offer easy access to IAD via Route 7 or Route 15, and Loudoun County schools are excellent throughout the county.
Base-specific considerations for IAD
Transatlantic trip quality
IAD is the primary East Coast international hub for transatlantic routes. Widebody equipment, premium international trips, and strong domestic connectivity. For pilots targeting international seniority, IAD competes directly with EWR.
Two-state tax decision
Virginia's estimated effective income tax for pilot-level income is 5.6% to 5.7%. Maryland's state effective rate is similar at 5.3% to 5.5%, but counties add a local piggyback tax, pushing the combined rate to approximately 8.4% to 8.7% in places like Montgomery County. Factor this into your neighborhood decision, not just housing cost and commute time.
Military transition culture
The DC metro has a large military and government community. Many airline pilots transitioning from military service find the culture at IAD familiar and comfortable. The professional community is strong.
Silver Line expansion
The Silver Line extension now connects Ashburn directly to IAD and into the DC metro. This changes the commute math for western Loudoun and provides a viable car-free option for some pilots.
Your Local Expert
Diane guides the strategy for your move.
The Northern Virginia and Maryland real estate market has nuances that matter for pilot families: school district boundaries that determine home values, the Virginia-versus-Maryland tax decision, and commute patterns that change dramatically depending on which highway you take and when.
Diane's role is the strategic layer. She helps you decide whether IAD makes financial sense for your career stage, what the Virginia-versus-Maryland tax impact looks like, and which part of the metro aligns with your priorities. The strategic advisory process is the same at every base. Diane brings the analysis and decision framework, while local market details are handled by professionals who know each area.
Moving to Washington Dulles?
The right decision about the move comes first. Then the right agent for the local market. Diane provides strategic guidance for pilots relocating to this base.