Hamman Way is a short, quiet residential street in Milton's Ford neighbourhood.
Hamman Way is a short, quiet residential street in Milton's Ford neighbourhood. It runs north from Apple Terrace to Wettlaufer Terrace, forming a compact pocket of homes built in the late 2010s. The street sits within a newer subdivision defined by consistent architecture and a family-oriented atmosphere. Ford District Park lies immediately adjacent, giving the street an open, green edge. The surrounding area is predominantly residential, with schools, grocery stores, and Highway 401 access within a short drive. Hamman Way offers a contained, walkable setting within a growing part of Milton.
Homes on Hamman Way are primarily semis and townhouses, with a single detached property. The stock dates to the late 2010s, built by Mattamy Homes. Semis dominate the street, offering three or four bedrooms over roughly 1,500 to 1,800 square feet. Townhouses are similarly sized and share the same construction era. Lot sizes are modest, consistent with a compact suburban layout. Exteriors feature brick and stone facades with attached garages. The detached home sits at the north end and trades at a premium to the attached units.
Typical sale prices for semis and townhouses on Hamman Way settle in the high-$800s to low-$900s. The detached home trades around $1.6M. Interiors are generally well-maintained, with many homes still under original builder finishes. Floor plans emphasize open main levels and three bedrooms upstairs. The street's uniform age and builder mean the housing stock is consistent in quality and character. Rentals for three- and four-bedroom units typically lease in the mid-$3,300 to mid-$3,400 range.
Ford District Park is immediately adjacent to Hamman Way, providing a playground, sports fields, and walking paths. For daily errands, Sobeys Milton is an eight-minute drive, while Walmart and FreshCo are about nine minutes away. Milton District Hospital is eight minutes by car. The Milton GO Station is a ten-minute drive, offering commuter rail service to Toronto. Highway 401 at Regional Road 25 is nine minutes away, connecting to Mississauga, Oakville, and beyond.
Several schools serve the area, including Craig Kielburger Secondary School and St. Scholastica Catholic Elementary School, both within a four-minute drive. The Milton Muslim Community Centre is nine minutes away. For outdoor recreation, Rattlesnake Point Conservation Area and Kelso Conservation Area are each about six minutes by car, offering hiking, biking, and seasonal activities. The street's location in the Ford neighbourhood places it within reach of both daily conveniences and regional green space.
Hamman Way sits in Milton's Ford neighbourhood with a modest but instructive sales record spanning several recent quarters. In Q4 2024 the typical trade on Hamman settled around the mid-$1.1Ms, and through Q3 2025 the pattern held broadly in that register, with three transactions clustering near $1.1M. By Q4 2025 the range had softened toward the low-$1Ms, and the single Q2 2026 data point lands around $925,000, indicating a meaningful step down from the 2024 peak. The street carries three semi-detached homes, two townhouses, and one detached among the sales recorded, and the detached crossings on adjacent Apple Terrace and Wettlaufer Terrace (typically around $1.6M and $1.55M respectively) suggest that Hamman's semi-detached and townhouse composition is pulling the street's typical price below the immediate neighbourhood ceiling for fully detached product. With only one active listing currently on the street, supply is genuinely constrained, which ordinarily supports pricing floors; the softening trend nonetheless indicates that buyers have regained negotiating room relative to the 2024 highs.
Days on market average around 115, a pace that reads as measured rather than urgent and implies sellers are waiting for qualified buyers rather than fielding competing offers. The lease side of the street shows four recorded tenancies against five sales over the same window, a ratio that reflects modest but real investor participation. Three-bedroom units lease near $3,400 per month and four-bedroom units near $3,400 per month; set against a typical sale price around $925,000, those rents imply a gross yield in the low-to-mid 4% range, which sits at the thinner end of what investors typically seek but may narrow as sale prices have trended down while rents have held. The combination of falling sale prices and relatively stable rents is the most significant signal visible in Hamman's current data.
Hamman Way sits in Milton's Ford neighbourhood, a position that makes the 401 the primary artery for daily commutes. The on-ramp at Regional Road 25 is a nine-minute drive, putting Mississauga within 22 minutes and Pearson within 32. For those heading to Toronto, the Milton GO station is ten minutes away; the full trip to Union runs around 70 minutes. Oakville and Burlington are each about 20 to 25 minutes by car. The street itself is quiet, with through-traffic limited to residents, 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 six-minute drive, with Sam Sherratt Public School also within reach at seven minutes. Catholic elementary students attend St. Scholastica Catholic Elementary, a four-minute drive from Hamman's southern end. Secondary students in the public board route to Craig Kielburger Secondary School, four minutes away, while Catholic secondary catchment falls to St. Francis Xavier Catholic Secondary, a seven-minute drive. The range of options within a short drive suits families at different stages of schooling.
Hamman Way tends to suit families and long-term renters who want a quiet street within reach of Milton's major commuter routes. The housing stock is a mix of semis and townhouses, with a single detached home, so the street appeals to buyers who prefer attached living over larger lots. The rental market here is anchored by unfurnished four-bedroom units that lease around $3,400, suggesting tenants who stay put rather than transient renters. Lease velocity is moderate, with homes typically finding tenants within a few months. Buyers on Hamman accept a tradeoff: less square footage and tighter frontage in exchange for a quieter pocket and quick access to the 401.
If you're considering alternatives in similar pockets, Apple Terrace offers detached homes trading around $1.6M, a step up in price and space for buyers who want a standalone house. Wettlaufer Terrace runs similar, with detached homes around $1.55M, appealing to those who prioritize a larger footprint over the attached stock on Hamman. Both are close enough that the commute and school catchments overlap, so the choice comes down to lot size and price point. For buyers who prefer newer construction or larger lots, the Ford neighbourhood has pockets built in the 2000s that trade at a premium.
Semi inventory on Hamman Way has seen 3 closed sales recently. Details below.
Townhouse inventory on Hamman Way has seen 2 closed sales recently. Details below.
Closed transactions from the Toronto Regional Real Estate Board. The picture below covers recent closed activity across all product types on Hamman Way.
Sale activity on Hamman Way in the recent period. Stats reflect closed transactions only.
Rental activity on Hamman Way across recent months. Breakdown by bed count below.
Typical sold price across all product types on Hamman Way, plotted with transaction volume.
| 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 Hamman Way. Click through for the full listing detail and photos.
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