Joyce Boulevard runs through the Dorset Park neighbourhood in north Milton.
Joyce Boulevard runs through the Dorset Park neighbourhood in north Milton. It is a residential street lined with detached homes, set back from the main corridors that define the area. The street sits within a grid of newer subdivisions, with Milton Community Park and the Milton District Hospital both within a few minutes' drive. The boulevard is quiet, with sidewalks and street trees framing a consistent streetscape. It is the kind of street where daily life revolves around nearby schools and grocery stops rather than through traffic.
Joyce Boulevard is a single-entry street of detached houses. The homes are of a similar vintage, built in the early 2000s as part of the Dorset Park development. Lot sizes are generous, with frontages typically in the mid-30-foot range and driveways that accommodate two cars. The architecture is predominantly two-storey, with brick and stone facades, attached garages, and front porches that vary in depth. Roof lines are consistent, with asphalt shingles in neutral tones.
Inside, floor plans typically offer four bedrooms and three bathrooms, with a family room on the main level and a separate living or dining area. Basements are unfinished in many cases, providing room for future expansion. Exterior treatments lean toward earth tones, with beige and taupe brick common. The street has a uniform feel, but individual lots show variation in landscaping and porch detailing. A few homes have been updated with new windows or front doors, while others remain in original condition.
Daily errands are straightforward from Joyce Boulevard. Sobeys and Walmart are both within a three-minute drive, and FreshCo is a similar distance. Milton District Hospital is three minutes by car, a reassuring presence for families. Several public elementary schools are within a five-minute drive, including Tiger Jeet Singh Public School and Chris Hadfield Public School. The Milton Muslim Community Centre is three minutes away.
For recreation, Rotary Park is a seven-minute walk, offering a playground and open fields. Milton Community Park, Willmott Park, and Velodrome Park are each a five- or six-minute drive. The Milton GO Station is 18 minutes by car, and Highway 401 is three minutes from the on-ramp at Regional Road 25. Commuting to Mississauga takes about 22 minutes by car, to Oakville 24 minutes, and to downtown Toronto about 64 minutes via GO Transit.
Joyce Boulevard trades infrequently, with only a handful of recorded transactions over the past year. The street is dominated by detached homes in the Dorset Park neighbourhood, a well-established pocket of Milton that appeals to families seeking space and proximity to parks, schools, and everyday amenities. With just one active listing at any given time, supply is exceptionally tight, and the typical days-on-market of around 52 suggests that when a home does come to market, it finds a buyer relatively quickly. The limited turnover means that price discovery happens less through frequent trades and more through the broader neighbourhood context. Buyers drawn to Joyce tend to value the quiet, residential character of the street and the convenience of being minutes from Highway 401, Milton District Hospital, and several grocery stores. The lack of rental activity reinforces the owner-occupied nature of the street, with little investor presence. For those considering a purchase here, patience and readiness to act are essential, as the street's thin trade record makes each listing a rare opportunity.
Across 1031 - DP Dorset Park, comparable detached homes have sold at broadly similar levels. The typical sold price for detached properties in the neighbourhood sits around $906,000, based on a substantial sample of 52 sales over the past year. Prices have softened year-over-year, easing back by roughly 10%, reflecting a broader market adjustment. However, buyers have been paying near asking, with a sold-to-ask ratio of approximately 0.993, indicating that well-priced homes continue to attract firm offers without significant discounting. The neighbourhood-wide pace runs slightly slower than Joyce's own days-on-market, with comparable homes typically clearing in around 75 days, suggesting that Joyce's limited supply may contribute to its faster turnover.
Joyce Boulevard sits in Dorset Park, a pocket that trades suburban quiet for reasonable access to the 401. The on-ramp at Regional Road 25 is a three-minute drive, making Mississauga a twenty-two-minute run and Pearson just over half an hour. The Milton GO station is farther at eighteen minutes, so the daily Toronto commute leans toward driving to the station or riding the 401 all the way. For those who work in Burlington or Oakville, the drive stays under twenty-five minutes. The street itself sees little through-traffic, which suits buyers who want highway proximity without the noise.
Public elementary options are plentiful within a five-minute drive: Tiger Jeet Singh, Chris Hadfield, Irma Coulson, and Robert Baldwin all draw from the area. Catholic elementary students typically attend St. Scholastica, a six-minute drive, or Guardian Angels at eight minutes. For secondary, Catholic students route to St. Kateri Tekakwitha or St. Francis Xavier, both roughly eight to nine minutes away. The public secondary catchment is less defined from the immediate area, but the cluster of elementary schools signals a family-oriented stretch with school proximity that works for young households.
Joyce Boulevard tends to suit families who want a detached home in a newer subdivision without paying the premium of Milton's most established enclaves. The single recent sale and thin activity suggest a street where turnover is low and owners stay put. Buyers here accept a longer drive to the GO station in exchange for quick highway access and a quiet street. The proximity to multiple elementary schools and Milton Community Park makes it a practical choice for households with young children. Those who prioritize walkability to transit or a downtown Milton address will find the tradeoffs less forgiving.
Buyers exploring comparable options might consider Wettlaufer Terrace, where detached homes trade around $1.8M, reflecting a more established pocket with larger lots. For those seeking a lower price point or a mix of housing types, Martin Street offers a different profile with homes trading around $310K. If proximity to the GO station matters more than highway access, streets closer to Milton's core would serve better. The choice between these alternatives hinges on whether lot size, price range, or commute priority carries more weight.
Detached inventory on Joyce Boulevard has seen 1 closed sales recently. Details below.
No closed sales on record for Joyce Boulevard in the recent period.
| Date | Address | Beds | Sold | vs Ask | DOM | Listing brokerage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Loading sold records⦠| ||||||
A thoughtful conversation grounded in every sale we have tracked on Joyce Boulevard.
Request a valuation β