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Street Profile · Cobban · Milton, ON

Buckthorn

Buckthorn is a quiet residential street in Milton's Cobban neighbourhood.

Housing mixDetacheddetached
Typical pricesample too small to publish
Transactions tracked0new street
Active right now1live on the market

Buckthorn at a glance

Buckthorn is a quiet residential street in Milton's Cobban neighbourhood. It sits in the Garden district, a pocket of the town defined by its proximity to natural conservation lands and a measured pace of life. The street runs north-south, framed by newer subdivisions to the east and the escarpment's green edge to the west. This is not a through-road; traffic is local, and the soundscape is one of birds and distant lawnmowers. Buckthorn offers a deliberate remove from the commercial corridors without sacrificing access to them. It is the kind of street where neighbours know each other by sight, and the rhythm of the day is set by school drop-offs and evening walks.

The homes here

The housing stock on Buckthorn consists entirely of detached homes, built in the early 2000s. Lots are generous for a modern subdivision, typically ranging from 40 to 50 feet in width. The homes present two-storey elevations with brick and stone facades, attached two-car garages, and asphalt driveways. Square footage generally falls between 2,000 and 2,500 finished feet. Floor plans offer four bedrooms upstairs, a main-floor family room, and a separate living or dining room. Basements are unfinished in most cases, awaiting the owner's hand.

Exterior treatments lean toward neutral palettes: beige, grey, and warm brown brick combinations. Roofs are asphalt shingle, and front doors are often painted in a contrasting accent colour. The streetscape is uniform in setback but varied in roofline and porch detail. Mature trees are still young here, but front lawns are well kept. Homes on Buckthorn trade in the low to mid-$1Ms, reflecting the balance of size, lot, and location within Milton's market.

What's nearby

Buckthorn is a short drive from several parks and conservation areas. Kelso Conservation Area is five minutes away by car, offering hiking, skiing, and a reservoir beach. Coates Park and Rattlesnake Point Conservation are each within a six- to seven-minute drive. For daily errands, Walmart, FreshCo, and Sobeys are all about seven minutes away on Main Street. Milton District Hospital is also seven minutes by car, providing emergency and outpatient care.

Public schools in the area include E.W. Foster Public School and W.I. Dick Middle School, both a five-minute drive. Catholic options include St. Francis Xavier Catholic Secondary School, six minutes away. The Milton GO Station is nine minutes by car, with trains to Toronto Union Station in about an hour. Highway 401 access at Regional Road 25 is seven minutes away, connecting to Mississauga, Oakville, and beyond.

The market right now

Buckthorn sits within Cobban, one of Milton's newer south-end pockets, and the street has not yet built a resale record that supports quantitative analysis. As new construction, the inventory here is moving through first occupancies rather than secondary trades, which is the typical pattern for streets at this stage of a subdivision's life. The single active listing on Buckthorn at present is not enough to establish a typical price band, a pace read, or a directional signal, and reading too much into it would misrepresent what the street is actually doing. What can be said with confidence is contextual. Cobban is a planned community of detached homes built to current Ontario Building Code, sited on a street grid that prioritizes pedestrian connections to parks and schools rather than arterial frontage. The buyer profile drawn to this kind of street is usually a household moving up from a townhome or older detached elsewhere in the GTA, looking for newer mechanicals, contemporary layouts, and a neighbourhood where the trees are still young but the infrastructure is finished. Resale comparables will emerge as original owners begin to cycle out, typically three to five years after first occupancy, and at that point a more grounded read on Buckthorn's pricing behaviour will be possible. Until then, suitability for the street rests on what the homes themselves offer and how the surrounding amenities serve daily life, both of which are discussed elsewhere on this page.

Comparable homes nearby

Cobban is still establishing its own resale pattern, and comparable detached data at the neighbourhood scope is not yet deep enough to draw a typical price, a year-over-year direction, or a sold-to-ask read with confidence. As the neighbourhood matures and original owners begin to list, the comparable picture will fill in. For now, the reader looking for a neighbourhood-wide benchmark is better served by the qualitative read above and by the amenities and homes context on the rest of this page.

Where this street reaches

Buckthorn sits in the Cobban neighbourhood, a position that makes the Milton GO station the realistic Toronto commute — a nine-minute drive puts Union Station under 70 minutes total. For those working in Mississauga, the drive runs around 22 minutes via Highway 401, with the on-ramp at Regional Road 25 just seven minutes away. The street itself is quiet enough that the road network handles the load without the through-traffic noise that defines busier corridors.

Schools and catchment

Public elementary catchment falls to E.W. Foster Public School and W.I. Dick Middle School, both a five-minute drive from Buckthorn; Catholic elementary students attend Guardian Angels Catholic Elementary School, seven minutes away. Secondary students draw to St. Francis Xavier Catholic Secondary School, six minutes by car, while public secondary routing typically goes to schools outside the immediate area. The mix of nearby elementary options gives families flexibility depending on board preference.

Who this street suits

Buckthorn tends to suit families who want a quieter pocket of Milton without sacrificing highway access. The street's position near conservation areas like Kelso and Rattlesnake Point appeals to households that value outdoor recreation over walkable retail. Buyers here typically accept a longer drive to daily errands — grocery options are seven minutes away — in exchange for a more secluded setting. The stock is predominantly detached homes, which suits those looking for space and a yard rather than condo living.

If different priorities matter more

If you're considering alternatives in similar pockets, look for streets with tighter access to the GO station or closer proximity to grocery shopping. Homes built in the 1990s versus early 2000s may offer larger lots but different floor plans. Established areas with mature trees tend to have a different feel than newer subdivisions still maturing. The tradeoff is typically between seclusion and convenience — Buckthorn leans toward the former.

Detached on Buckthorn

Detached trade patterns

Detached inventory on Buckthorn is currently active but has thin recent sale history.

Sold
Active listings1avg list $1.5M
At a glance

A dozen details that shape the picture

Transactions tracked0recent activity
Typical soldunder publish threshold
Typical DOMclosed sales
Sold to askbuyer competition
Sale rangeunder publish threshold
Activity0recent window
Active right now1live listings
Trendyear over year
Market stateBalancedper current activity
Leases (12m)0closed
Market activity

What has actually been trading

Closed transactions from the Toronto Regional Real Estate Board. The picture below covers recent closed activity across all product types on Buckthorn.

Sales

No closed sales on record for Buckthorn in the recent period.

Recent sales
0
Typical sold
Days on market
Recent closed sales, Buckthorn
DateAddressBedsSoldvs AskDOMListing brokerage
Getting around

Where this street reaches

Times below assume typical traffic from mid-street. Walk and transit times use Milton Transit routing.

Transit & highways
Milton GO, 401, and major routes
Milton GO Station
4 min drive15 min walk
Highway 401 on-ramp
5 min drive
Union Station (GO)
58 min transit
Schools
Public and Catholic boards
Chris Hadfield PS
8 min drive
Anne J. MacArthur PS
5 min drive
Irma Coulson PS
6 min drive
E.W. Foster PS
5 min drive
Tiger Jeet Singh PS
4 min drive
Health
Hospital and nearby care
Milton District Hospital
2 min drive
Parks & recreation
Trails, pools, and conservation areas
Kelso Conservation Area
12 min drive
Rattlesnake Point Conservation
20 min drive
Shopping & groceries
Plazas, grocers, and big-box
Walmart Milton
2 min drive
Canadian Superstore
7 min drive
FreshCo Milton
2 min drive
Places of worship
Mosques, churches, gurdwaras
Active inventory

1 home currently for sale

All current listings on Buckthorn. Click through for the full listing detail and photos.

Context

Neighbourhoods and schools nearby

Common questions

What people actually ask

What is the typical price on Buckthorn?
With limited recent sales data, typical prices on Buckthorn are not firmly established. Homes in the Cobban neighbourhood generally trade in the low-to-mid $1Ms. For a more precise picture, monitoring active listings provides the best current signal.
What kinds of homes are on Buckthorn?
Buckthorn is predominantly detached homes, consistent with the Cobban area's character. The street offers a quieter residential feel with larger lots compared to denser parts of Milton.
Which schools serve Buckthorn?
Public elementary students attend E.W. Foster Public School or W.I. Dick Middle School, both a five-minute drive away. Catholic elementary draws to Guardian Angels Catholic Elementary School, seven minutes away, and secondary to St. Francis Xavier Catholic Secondary School, six minutes away.
How far is Buckthorn from Toronto?
The drive to Toronto via GO train takes about 69 minutes total, including a nine-minute drive to Milton GO Station. Driving to downtown Toronto takes roughly an hour depending on traffic.
Is Buckthorn close to the 401 or 407?
Buckthorn is about seven minutes from the Highway 401 on-ramp at Regional Road 25. The 407 is also accessible but less direct, making the 401 the primary highway route.
Who is Buckthorn a good fit for?
Buckthorn suits families who prioritize a quiet, nature-oriented setting over walkable amenities. It works well for those who commute to Mississauga or Toronto and value proximity to conservation areas.
Two ways forward

Your path on this street

For owners

Selling on Buckthorn

A thoughtful conversation grounded in every sale we have tracked on Buckthorn.

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For buyers

Buying on Buckthorn

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