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Street Profile ยท Willmott ยท Milton, ON

Miltonbrock Crescent

Miltonbrock Crescent is a quiet residential loop in the Willmott neighbourhood of north Milton.

Housing mixDetacheddetached
Typical priceโ€”sample too small to publish
Transactions tracked0new street
Active right now1live on the market

Miltonbrock Crescent at a glance

Miltonbrock Crescent is a quiet residential loop in the Willmott neighbourhood of north Milton. The street forms a gentle crescent off the main artery of Scott Boulevard, with no through traffic beyond its own residents. It sits in a mature pocket of the community, where the housing stock dates from the early 2000s. Willmott Park lies directly at the crescent's entrance, giving the street an immediate green edge. The surrounding area is predominantly residential, with schools, a grocery store, and the Milton GO station all within a short drive. This is a street defined by its calm, its proximity to parkland, and its place in a well-established Milton subdivision.

The homes here

Miltonbrock Crescent is lined with detached homes built in the early 2000s. The builder is not attributed with high confidence, but the homes share a consistent architectural language: two-storey forms with brick and vinyl exteriors, attached two-car garages, and front lawns that step back from the street. Lot sizes are generous for a crescent, with many properties offering deep backyards. The typical home measures between 2,000 and 2,500 square feet of living space, with four bedrooms and a family room on the main floor.

Exterior treatments vary across the crescent, with some homes featuring stone accents or bay windows that break up the street wall. Roofs are predominantly asphalt shingle in neutral tones. Driveways are wide enough for two cars, and the crescent's gentle curve gives each property a slightly different sightline. Condition is generally well-maintained, with many homes showing updated landscaping and modern front doors. The street's layout encourages a neighbourly feel, with porches and front steps that face the crescent rather than a busy road.

What's nearby

Willmott Park sits at the mouth of Miltonbrock Crescent, a walkable green space with a playground, sports fields, and walking paths. For daily errands, Sobeys Milton is a six-minute drive west on Derry Road, and FreshCo and Walmart are similarly close. St. Scholastica Catholic Elementary School is adjacent to the park, making the crescent a practical choice for families with young children. Craig Kielburger Secondary School is a two-minute drive north.

Milton District Hospital is six minutes by car. The Milton GO Station is eight minutes away, with trains to Toronto Union in about an hour. Highway 401 access at Regional Road 25 is seven minutes from the crescent. For recreation, Kelso Conservation Area offers hiking and skiing within a ten-minute drive. The crescent itself is a quiet loop, but the amenities of north Milton are all within a few minutes' reach.

The market right now

Miltonbrock Crescent trades rarely enough that no meaningful price pattern has settled into the record. The street sits inside Willmott, a newer pocket on Milton's west side where the housing form leans toward detached homes set on a quiet curved lane rather than a through-street. With one active listing currently and no recorded sales or leases to draw against, the street's own pricing story has not yet been written in any volume that supports a quantitative read.

What can be said qualitatively: crescents of this kind in Willmott tend to attract owner-occupier households who value the absence of cut-through traffic, the proximity to a neighbourhood park, and the walk-in radius to a Catholic elementary school. The buyer pool skews toward families settling in for a long hold rather than investors chasing turnover, which itself helps explain the thin trade record. Homes change hands when life stage shifts, not on a schedule that produces regular comparables. For a buyer drawn to Miltonbrock, the appeal is less about reading the market and more about recognising the street character: a contained loop, newer construction stock, the kind of address where neighbours know each other and the front-yard setbacks are consistent. Pricing for any listing that does surface will lean on the wider Willmott comparable set rather than on the street itself, and judgement on value will rest more on the specific home than on a pattern of recent trades.

Comparable homes nearby

Across Willmott, comparable detached homes provide the most useful reference point for anything that comes to market on Miltonbrock, since the street's own trade record is too thin to anchor a view. The neighbourhood carries a deeper pool of recent activity and a more consistent rhythm of turnover, which gives buyers and sellers a workable baseline for what detached stock of this vintage and form typically commands. Read alongside the active listing on the crescent itself, the wider Willmott pattern is the frame that does the analytical work here. A buyer evaluating Miltonbrock should expect the conversation to centre on how a specific home sits relative to the neighbourhood comparable, not relative to a street history that has yet to accumulate.

Getting around

Miltonbrock Crescent sits in Willmott, a position that makes the GO line the realistic Toronto commute. The Milton GO Station is an eight-minute drive; with train time, Union Station comes in just over an hour total. For those working in Mississauga or Oakville, the drive runs around 22 and 24 minutes respectively. The 401 ramp at Regional Road 25 is seven minutes away, a daily handle for commuters heading east or west. The street itself is quiet, a crescent that sees little through traffic, so the road network handles the load without the noise that defines busier corridors.

Schools and catchment

Public catchment falls to Sam Sherratt Public School, a five-minute drive that draws families along the western half of the street; Catholic elementary students attend St. Scholastica Catholic ES, which is walkable from Miltonbrock's southern end. Older students draw to Craig Kielburger Secondary School, the dominant public secondary catchment for this part of Willmott, two minutes by car. Catholic secondary students route to St. Francis Xavier Catholic SS, a five-minute drive. The mix of nearby elementary options gives families flexibility depending on board preference.

Who this street suits

Miltonbrock Crescent tends to suit families who want a quiet crescent within reach of Willmott's amenities without living on a main artery. The stock is detached homes, and the street's position near St. Scholastica and Craig Kielburger makes it a natural fit for households with school-aged children. Buyers here accept a longer Toronto commute in exchange for a quieter setting and a larger lot than what tighter subdivisions offer. The crescent layout limits through traffic, which appeals to those who prioritize safety for kids playing outside. Recent rental activity is minimal, suggesting most homes are owner-occupied and the street turns over slowly.

If different priorities matter more

If you're considering alternatives in similar pockets, homes built in the early 2000s with larger pie-shaped lots can be found in the same neighbourhood but closer to the conservation area. For buyers who want a shorter commute to Toronto, streets nearer the GO station trade at a premium but offer a quicker walk to the platform. Those seeking newer construction with tighter frontages might look toward subdivisions built in the 2010s, where the tradeoff is less yard space for a more modern floor plan. The key difference across these options is lot size versus commute time versus build era.

Detached on Miltonbrock Crescent

Detached trade patterns

Detached inventory on Miltonbrock Crescent is currently active but has thin recent sale history.

Sold
Active listings1avg list $1.75M
At a glance

A dozen details that shape the picture

Transactions tracked0recent activity
Typical soldโ€”under publish threshold
Typical DOMโ€”closed sales
Sold to askโ€”buyer competition
Sale rangeโ€”under publish threshold
Activity0recent window
Active right now1live listings
Trendโ€”year over year
Market stateBalancedper current activity
Leases (12m)0closed
Market activity

What has actually been trading

Closed transactions from the Toronto Regional Real Estate Board. The picture below covers recent closed activity across all product types on Miltonbrock Crescent.

Sales

No closed sales on record for Miltonbrock Crescent in the recent period.

Recent sales
0
Typical sold
โ€”
Days on market
โ€”
Recent closed sales, Miltonbrock Crescent
DateAddressBedsSoldvs AskDOMListing brokerage
Getting around

Where this street reaches

Times below assume typical traffic from mid-street. Walk and transit times use Milton Transit routing.

Transit & highways
Milton GO, 401, and major routes
Milton GO Station
4 min drive15 min walk
Highway 401 on-ramp
5 min drive
Union Station (GO)
58 min transit
Schools
Public and Catholic boards
Chris Hadfield PS
8 min drive
Anne J. MacArthur PS
5 min drive
Irma Coulson PS
6 min drive
E.W. Foster PS
5 min drive
Tiger Jeet Singh PS
4 min drive
Health
Hospital and nearby care
Milton District Hospital
2 min drive
Parks & recreation
Trails, pools, and conservation areas
Kelso Conservation Area
12 min drive
Rattlesnake Point Conservation
20 min drive
Shopping & groceries
Plazas, grocers, and big-box
Walmart Milton
2 min drive
Canadian Superstore
7 min drive
FreshCo Milton
2 min drive
Places of worship
Mosques, churches, gurdwaras
Active inventory

1 home currently for sale

All current listings on Miltonbrock Crescent. Click through for the full listing detail and photos.

Context

Neighbourhoods and schools nearby

Common questions

What people actually ask

What is the typical price on Miltonbrock Crescent?
A reliable street-level price isn't available given the thin recent activity on Miltonbrock Crescent. Across the Willmott area, comparable homes trade around $1.1M.
How fast do homes sell on Miltonbrock Crescent?
Recent sales data is limited, so a clear picture of market speed isn't available. In the broader Willmott area, detached homes typically find buyers within a few weeks to a couple of months.
What kinds of homes are on Miltonbrock Crescent?
The street is composed entirely of detached homes, built in the early 2000s. Lots tend to be generous compared to newer subdivisions, with many properties offering pie-shaped backyards.
Which schools serve Miltonbrock Crescent?
Public elementary students attend Sam Sherratt PS, a five-minute drive away; Catholic elementary students walk to St. Scholastica Catholic ES. Secondary catchment is Craig Kielburger SS for public and St. Francis Xavier Catholic SS for Catholic.
How far is Miltonbrock Crescent from Toronto?
The drive to the Milton GO Station takes about eight minutes, and the train to Union Station runs roughly 60 minutes, making the total commute around 68 minutes. Driving to downtown Toronto takes about an hour outside of peak traffic.
Who is Miltonbrock Crescent a good fit for?
It suits families who value a quiet crescent with large lots and proximity to good schools. Buyers here accept a longer Toronto commute in exchange for a more spacious, low-traffic setting.
If Miltonbrock Crescent isn't the right fit, what similar streets should I look at?
Consider streets in Willmott with similar detached homes but closer to the GO station for a shorter commute. Alternatively, look at newer subdivisions in the area if a more modern floor plan is a priority.
Two ways forward

Your path on this street

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