Mceastern Path is a quiet residential street in the Coates neighbourhood of Milton.
Mceastern Path is a quiet residential street in the Coates neighbourhood of Milton. It runs north-south between Derry Road and Louis St. Laurent Avenue, a short distance west of Regional Road 25. The street sits in a newer section of Milton, where development has filled in over the past decade. Sidewalks line both sides. The lots are modest in size, and the street is lined with young trees. Coates Park sits at the southern end, giving the street a green anchor. This is a family-oriented pocket, with schools and daily conveniences within a short drive.
Mceastern Path is composed entirely of townhouses. These are stacked and back-to-back configurations, typical of the area's infill development. The homes are two and three storeys, with brick and stone facades. Driveways are short, and garages are integrated into the ground floor. The street has a uniform, contemporary look. Units range from roughly 1,200 to 1,600 square feet. Three-bedroom layouts are the norm, with some two-bedroom units at the ends. Build quality is consistent across the street.
Exterior treatments alternate between red brick, grey stone, and beige siding. Front doors are painted in dark hues, a deliberate contrast to the lighter masonry. Windows are large and square, letting in ample light. The street feels tidy and maintained. Lawns are small but well kept. There is little variation in roofline or massing, which gives the street a cohesive, planned feel. Townhomes here trade in the high-$700s to low-$800s, reflecting the newer stock and the Coates neighbourhood's positioning.
Coates Park is a two-minute walk from Mceastern Path. It offers a playground, a splash pad, and open green space. For groceries, Walmart and FreshCo are a four-minute drive south on Regional Road 25. Sobeys is five minutes away. Milton District Hospital is four minutes by car, a reassuring presence for families. The Milton GO Station is six minutes away, with regular trains to Toronto's Union Station. Highway 401 is accessible in four minutes via Regional Road 25, connecting to Mississauga and beyond.
Several public and Catholic schools serve the area within a five-minute drive, including Chris Hadfield Public School and Milton District High School. Places of worship include the Milton Muslim Community Centre, four minutes away. The street is well positioned for daily errands and weekend outings. Kelso Conservation Area is a seven-minute drive for hiking and skiing. The escarpment views from nearby parks add a natural backdrop to an otherwise suburban setting.
Mceastern Path sits within the Coates neighbourhood as new construction, and no resale history has yet accumulated on the street itself. That absence of transaction data is a feature of timing rather than a signal about the address: the Coates community has been one of Milton's more active growth corridors, and comparable townhome streets nearby have established a pricing context that will eventually anchor Mceastern Path's own resale record. With one active listing currently on the street, the opening data point for the resale clock is close at hand.
Mceastern Path sits in Coates, a pocket that balances suburban quiet with reasonable reach. The 401 on-ramp at Regional Road 25 is a four-minute drive, making Mississauga a 22-minute run and Pearson about half an hour. The Milton GO Station is six minutes away; a typical Toronto commute runs just over an hour door to door. For Oakville or Burlington, the drive stays under 25 minutes. The street itself sees little through traffic, so the road network handles the load without the noise of a busier corridor.
Public elementary students draw to Chris Hadfield PS, Anne J. MacArthur PS, or Irma Coulson PS, each roughly five minutes by car. Catholic elementary falls to Our Lady of Fatima or St. Scholastica, both a six-minute drive. Secondary catchment splits between Milton District High School and Bishop P.F. Reding Catholic SS, each about five minutes away. The concentration of schools within a short radius makes this stretch practical for families routing multiple children through different boards.
Mceastern Path tends to suit families who want a quiet, established pocket with quick access to schools and the 401. The townhouse stock here appeals to first-time buyers or those downsizing from larger lots while staying in Coates. The tradeoff is walkability: parks like Coates Park are within a two-minute walk, but daily errands require a car. Buyers here accept that in exchange for a street that feels settled and low on pass-through traffic. The rental market is minimal, so the street leans owner-occupied.
If you're considering alternatives in similar pockets, buyers who want a shorter walk to the GO station might look closer to Milton's core, where the tradeoff is more street noise. Those seeking larger lots or detached homes often move to streets built in the early 2000s, where frontages widen but the commute to the highway stretches slightly. For a newer subdivision feel, the northern edges of Coates offer more recent construction, though the school catchment shifts. Each option trades one convenience for another.
Townhouse inventory on Mceastern Path is currently active but has thin recent sale history.
Closed transactions from the Toronto Regional Real Estate Board. The picture below covers recent closed activity across all product types on Mceastern Path.
No closed sales on record for Mceastern Path in the recent period.
| Date | Address | Beds | Sold | vs Ask | DOM | Listing brokerage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No recent sales on record. | ||||||
Times below assume typical traffic from mid-street. Walk and transit times use Milton Transit routing.
All current listings on Mceastern Path. Click through for the full listing detail and photos.
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