Apple Terrace sits in the Cobban neighbourhood of north Milton, a quiet residential pocket framed by the Niagara Escarpment to the north and the urban grid to the south.
Apple Terrace sits in the Cobban neighbourhood of north Milton, a quiet residential pocket framed by the Niagara Escarpment to the north and the urban grid to the south. The street runs east-west between Martin Street and a natural buffer of green space, giving it a contained, almost cul-de-sac feel. Its position places it within a five-minute drive of the Milton GO Station and Highway 401, yet the immediate surroundings remain distinctly suburban. The terrace itself is short, lined with mature trees and detached homes that date from the early 2000s. It is the kind of street where neighbours know one another and foot traffic is light.
Apple Terrace is a street of detached homes, all built in the early 2000s. The typical home here is a two-storey, four-bedroom house with a double-car garage and a brick-and-stone exterior. Lot sizes are generous for the area, with many properties backing onto green space or a ravine. The builder is not attributed with high confidence, but the homes share a consistent architectural language: symmetrical facades, peaked roofs, and large front windows. Interiors typically offer nine-foot ceilings on the main floor, hardwood flooring, and a family room off the kitchen.
The street's housing stock shows little variation in form. Most homes range between 2,200 and 2,800 square feet, with the occasional model featuring a finished walkout basement. Exterior treatments lean toward earth tones, with beige and taupe brick common. Condition across the street is strong; several homes have updated kitchens and bathrooms, and mature landscaping is the norm. The uniformity of the build era gives Apple Terrace a cohesive streetscape, one that appeals to families seeking space and consistency.
Apple Terrace is a short drive from several parks, including Coates Park and Rotary Park, both within six minutes. The nearby Kelso Conservation Area offers hiking trails and a ski hill, while Rattlesnake Point Conservation provides escarpment views and rock climbing. For daily errands, Walmart, FreshCo, and Sobeys are all within a seven-minute drive. Milton District Hospital is also seven minutes away, and the Milton GO Station is nine minutes by car, providing a 69-minute commute to downtown Toronto.
Public schools in the area include E.W. Foster Public School and W.I. Dick Middle School, both five minutes away. Catholic options include St. Francis Xavier Catholic Secondary School and Guardian Angels Catholic Elementary School. The Milton Muslim Community Centre is seven minutes from the street. Highway 401 access at Regional Road 25 is seven minutes away, making Apple Terrace a practical base for commuters heading to Mississauga, Oakville, or Burlington.
Apple Terrace is a quiet pocket of detached homes in Cobban, where trade activity is measured but not absent. Over the recent period, six sales and three leases have been recorded, with a single active listing suggesting supply remains tight. The typical detached home on the street trades around $1.45M, though the quarterly trend shows variability: in Q1 '26 the typical price sat near $1.33M, then climbed to around $1.57M in Q2 '26, reflecting a firming market through the spring. Days on market average around 124, indicating a pace that allows buyers time to evaluate but rewards decisive offers.
Lease activity adds another dimension: three-bedroom units rent around $3,300 per month, four-bedroom units near $3,500, and five-bedroom units around $3,600. Against a typical sale price of $1.45M, gross yields sit in the 2.7% to 3.0% range, a modest return that points to owner-occupant demand rather than investor speculation. The single active listing and low turnover overall suggest that Apple Terrace is a street where homeowners tend to stay, and new listings are absorbed without prolonged exposure.
Across 1026 - CB Cobban, comparable detached homes have sold at broadly similar levels. The typical sold price for detached properties in the neighbourhood sits around $1.33M, based on a substantial sample of 105 sales over the past year. Prices have firmed modestly year-over-year, rising just over 2%, while the sold-to-ask ratio of 0.977 indicates that buyers are negotiating small discounts from list price, a sign of balanced conditions. Neighbourhood-wide days on market average 103, slightly faster than Apple Terrace's own pace, suggesting that the street's premium positioning or particular lot characteristics may require a touch more patience from sellers.
Apple Terrace sits in Cobban, a pocket that trades the convenience of Milton's core for a quieter setting. The 401 on-ramp at Regional Road 25 is a seven-minute drive, making Mississauga a 22-minute run and Pearson reachable in just over half an hour. The Milton GO Station is nine minutes away by car; the full trip to Union Station runs about 69 minutes, a realistic daily rhythm for downtown commuters. The street itself sees little through traffic, so the road network handles the load without the noise of a busier corridor.
Public elementary catchment draws to E.W. Foster Public School, a five-minute drive that anchors families on the street's western side. Catholic elementary students attend Guardian Angels Catholic Elementary School, seven minutes away. For secondary, public students route to W.I. Dick Middle School for grades 7 and 8, then to Craig Kielburger Secondary School; Catholic secondary is St. Francis Xavier Catholic Secondary School, a six-minute drive. The mix of nearby elementary options gives families some flexibility depending on board preference.
Apple Terrace tends to suit families who want a detached home in a quiet cul-de-sac setting without paying for the newest subdivision premium. The stock is all detached, typically trading in the mid-$1.4M range, which puts it above Cobban's neighbourhood typical of around $1.33M. Buyers here accept a slightly longer drive to the GO station and highway in exchange for a more settled, less transitional feel. The street's rental segment leans toward long-term anchored tenants, with unfurnished leases dominating and a typical three-bedroom renting around $3,300. It is not a street for those who need walkable transit or immediate highway access.
If you are considering alternatives in similar pockets, the tradeoff often comes down to lot size versus proximity. Homes built in the 1990s on larger lots offer more outdoor space but sit farther from the highway and GO station. Newer subdivisions closer to the 401 tighten frontage but cut the commute. For buyers who prioritize walkable amenities, streets nearer to the Milton GO Station or the hospital may be a better fit, though they typically command a premium. The choice is between space and convenience, not quality.
Detached inventory on Apple Terrace has seen 6 closed sales recently. Details below.
Sale activity on Apple Terrace in the recent period. Stats reflect closed transactions only.
Rental activity on Apple Terrace across recent months. Breakdown by bed count below.
| Date | Address | Beds | Sold | vs Ask | DOM | Listing brokerage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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A thoughtful conversation grounded in every sale we have tracked on Apple Terrace.
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