Miltonly/Streets/Labine Point
Street Profile Β· Cobban Β· Milton, ON

Labine Point

Labine Point is a short, quiet street in Milton's Cobban neighbourhood.

Townhouse
Housing mix
sample too small to publish
Typical price
2
Transactions tracked
2
Active right now
Transactions tracked
1
recent activity
Typical sold
under publish threshold
Typical DOM
closed sales
Sold to ask
buyer competition
Sale range
under publish threshold
Activity
0
recent window
Active right now
2
live listings
Trend
+2.7%
year over year
Market state
Balanced
per current activity
Busiest month
May
most closings

Labine Point at a glance

Labine Point is a short, quiet street in Milton's Cobban neighbourhood. It runs east-west between Regional Road 25 and the escarpment edge, a position that gives it a semi-rural feel despite being minutes from the city's commercial spine. The street is lined with newer townhomes, built in the early 2010s, and sits at the northern fringe of Milton's suburban grid. To the north, the Kelso Conservation Area and the Niagara Escarpment frame the horizon. The street's low traffic and cul-de-sac-like character make it a pocket of calm within a growing community.

Housing stock on Labine Point

Labine Point is composed entirely of townhomes, all constructed in the early 2010s. The units are three-bedroom, two-and-a-half-bathroom layouts, typically spanning 1,500 to 1,700 square feet. Each unit has a private driveway and a small rear yard. The architecture is consistent across the street: brick-and-vinyl exteriors with attached garages, pitched roofs, and front-facing windows that bring light into the main living areas.

The builder is not attributed with high confidence, but the homes share a uniform design language common to mid-range production builders of the era. Interiors feature open-concept main floors with kitchens opening onto dining and living spaces. Upstairs, the primary bedroom includes a walk-in closet and ensuite bath. The street's compact layout and consistent finishes appeal to first-time buyers and families seeking a low-maintenance property near the escarpment. Across the Cobban neighbourhood, townhomes typically trade around $800,000.

What's nearby

Labine Point is a five-minute drive from the Kelso Conservation Area, a 600-hectare park with hiking trails, a reservoir, and winter sports. Coates Park and Rotary Park are each six to seven minutes away by car, offering playgrounds and sports fields. For daily errands, Walmart, FreshCo, and Sobeys are all within a seven-minute drive. Milton District Hospital is also seven minutes away.

The Milton GO Station is nine minutes by car, with trains to Toronto's Union Station in about an hour. Highway 401 access at Regional Road 25 is seven minutes away. Several public elementary schools, including E.W. Foster PS and W.I. Dick Middle School, are within a five-minute drive. The Milton Muslim Community Centre is seven minutes away. The street's location balances proximity to conservation land with access to the city's core amenities.

The market right now

Labine Point trades rarely; the street has recorded minimal resale activity in recent quarters, with fewer than five total transactions on record. A single three-bedroom townhouse lease at approximately $3,000 per month represents the only documented transaction, reflecting the street's thin market footprint in the Cobban neighbourhood. With just two active listings currently available, supply remains constrained, which often signals either steady owner-occupancy or a subset of the stock in active circulation. The limited transaction history makes price discovery difficult at the street level; suitability and pricing expectation are most clearly read in the context of the Cobban neighbourhood's comparable townhouse market, where typical values and pace patterns provide a reference frame for properties of this type and era.

Comparable homes nearby

Across the Cobban neighbourhood, comparable townhouse homes typically trade around $800,000. This figure rests on a robust sample of 103 sales, providing a stable anchor for valuation in the area. Year-over-year, neighbourhood prices have firmed modestly, moving up approximately 1.7 percent from the prior twelve-month window. Buyer-seller balance leans slightly toward the seller; homes are closing at approximately 97.6 percent of asking price on average, indicating modest negotiation room but a fundamentally supported market. Pace across the neighbourhood runs somewhat slower than typical Milton averages, with comparable townhouses clearing in around 104 days on average, a pattern consistent with a measured regional market where buyers take time to evaluate their options.

Where this street reaches

Labine Point sits in the Cobban neighbourhood, a position that makes the GO line the realistic Toronto commute. A nine-minute drive to Milton GO Station puts Union under 70 minutes total. For those working in Mississauga, the drive runs around 22 minutes; Pearson is about 32 minutes via Highway 401, whose on-ramp at Regional Road 25 is seven minutes away. The street itself is quiet, with through-traffic limited to local residents.

Schools and catchment

Public elementary catchment draws to E.W. Foster Public School, a five-minute drive, and W.I. Dick Middle School, also five minutes away. Catholic elementary students attend Guardian Angels Catholic Elementary School, seven minutes by car. Secondary students in the public board draw to Craig Kielburger Secondary School; Catholic secondary students attend St. Francis Xavier Catholic Secondary School, six minutes away.

Who this street suits

Labine Point tends to suit families and couples looking for a newer townhouse in a quiet pocket of Cobban. The street's single recent lease suggests a rental market that favours long-term tenants, with unfurnished units typical. Buyers here accept a slightly longer drive to the GO station in exchange for a more secluded setting and proximity to conservation areas like Kelso. The stock is consistent, which appeals to those who value predictability over variety.

If different priorities matter more

If you're considering alternatives in similar pockets, homes built in the early 2000s with larger lots may suit those wanting more outdoor space. For buyers who prioritize walkability to groceries and the GO station, streets closer to the Milton core trade a quieter setting for convenience. Newer subdivisions still maturing offer a different timeline of neighbourhood feel. Each option shifts the balance between seclusion and access.

By the home

What trades on Labine Point, by type

Townhouse

Townhouse inventory on Labine Point is currently active but has thin recent sale history.

Typical price
under publish threshold
Price band
β€”
Time on market
β€”
Sold to ask
β€”
Active listings
2
avg list $850K
The market

Recent activity on Labine Point

Sales

No closed sales on record for Labine Point in the recent period.

Recent sales
0
Typical sold
β€”
Days on market
β€”

Leases

Rental activity on Labine Point across recent months. Breakdown by bed count below.

Recent leases
1
Typical rent
$0
Days on market
37
Recent closed sales, Labine Point
DateAddressBedsSoldvs AskDOMListing brokerage
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Getting around

Commute & reach from Labine Point

Transit & highways
Milton GO, 401, and major routes
Milton GO Station4 min drive Β· 15 min walk
Highway 401 on-ramp5 min drive
Union Station (GO)58 min transit
Schools
Public and Catholic boards
Chris Hadfield PS8 min drive
Anne J. MacArthur PS5 min drive
Irma Coulson PS6 min drive
E.W. Foster PS5 min drive
Tiger Jeet Singh PS4 min drive
Health
Hospital and nearby care
Milton District Hospital2 min drive
Parks & recreation
Trails, pools, and conservation areas
Kelso Conservation Area12 min drive
Rattlesnake Point Conservation20 min drive
Shopping & groceries
Plazas, grocers, and big-box
Walmart Milton2 min drive
Canadian Superstore7 min drive
FreshCo Milton2 min drive
Places of worship
Mosques, churches, gurdwaras
Halton Islamic Community Centre13 min drive
Milton Muslim Community Centre2 min drive
Islamic Community Centre of Milton8 min drive
Common questions

About Labine Point

What is the typical price on Labine Point?
A reliable street-level price isn't available given the thin recent activity on Labine Point. Across the Cobban area, comparable townhomes trade around $800,000.
How fast do homes sell on Labine Point?
Recent activity is limited, so a clear picture of sale speed isn't available. In the broader Cobban area, townhomes typically find buyers within a few months.
What kinds of homes are on Labine Point?
Labine Point consists entirely of townhomes, built in a consistent style typical of the early 2000s development in Cobban. The stock is uniform, with no detached or condo options.
Which schools serve Labine Point?
Public elementary students attend E.W. Foster Public School, a five-minute drive; Catholic elementary students go to Guardian Angels Catholic Elementary School, seven minutes away. Secondary students draw to Craig Kielburger Secondary School (public) or St. Francis Xavier Catholic Secondary School (Catholic).
How far is Labine Point from Toronto?
The drive to Milton GO Station takes about nine minutes, and the train to Union Station runs roughly 60 minutes, making the total commute around 69 minutes. Driving directly to downtown Toronto takes longer, especially at peak times.
Who built most of the homes on Labine Point?
The builder information for Labine Point is not well-documented, but the homes appear to be part of a larger early-2000s development in Cobban. Most units share similar finishes and floor plans.
What's the rental market like on Labine Point?
Rental activity is light, with only one recent lease recorded. That unit was a three-bedroom townhouse renting around $3,000, unfurnished, suggesting a market geared toward long-term tenants.
Who is Labine Point a good fit for?
Labine Point suits families and couples who value a quiet, consistent townhouse neighbourhood near conservation areas. It works well for those who drive to the GO station and don't need walkable amenities.
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