Stacey Crescent is a quiet residential loop in the Bowes neighbourhood of north Milton. It sits east of Thompson Road South and north of Main Street East, a short drive from the town's commercial spine. The crescent is framed by mature trees and open green space, with Escarpment View Park within walking distance. Homes here date from the early 2000s, part of Milton's steady expansion northward. The street's cul-de-sac layout keeps through traffic minimal, lending it a settled, family-oriented character. It is the kind of street where neighbours know each other by sight.
Stacey Crescent is lined with detached homes built in the early 2000s. The dominant form is two-storey, four-bedroom houses on standard lots of roughly 35 to 40 feet wide. Brick and vinyl siding are the typical exterior treatments, with attached two-car garages. The builder is not attributed with high confidence, but the homes share a consistent architectural vocabulary: open-concept main floors, eat-in kitchens, and family rooms with gas fireplaces.
Lot depths are generous, and many backyards back onto parkland or walkways. Driveways are long enough to accommodate guest parking. The stock is well maintained; roofs and windows appear to be original or early replacement cycle. Floor plans vary modestly, with some homes offering main-floor dens or second-floor bonus rooms. The street's uniformity in era and scale gives it a cohesive streetscape.
Escarpment View Park is a six-minute walk from the crescent, offering a playground, sports field, and walking trails. For daily errands, Walmart and FreshCo are each a five-minute drive south on Main Street. Milton District Hospital is six minutes by car, and Highway 401 is accessible via James Snow Parkway in about four minutes. Several public and Catholic schools serve the area, including Milton District High School and Bishop P.F. Reding Catholic Secondary School, both within a five-minute drive.
The Milton GO Station is 16 minutes away by car, making downtown Toronto a viable commute of just over an hour. For weekend recreation, Rotary Park and Centennial Park are a short drive north. The Milton Muslim Community Centre is five minutes away. The crescent's position in Bowes puts it close to the town's amenities while retaining a suburban calm.
Stacey Crescent trades rarely, with only a handful of recorded transactions over the past year. The street's activity reflects its limited inventory and emerging status within the Bowes neighbourhood. With just one active listing currently on the market, the pace of turnover remains sparse. The property type composition on the street leans toward residential, though the thin transaction history means that condition-based price differentials are difficult to isolate with confidence.
Lease activity on the street provides a clearer picture of rental demand than sales do. A one-bedroom unit rented recently, anchoring the rental profile for the street. This lease-to-sales ratio, weighted heavily toward rental activity, suggests the street functions as both an owner-occupied and rental residential corridor. Days-on-market figures for the sparse sales record are unreliable given the transaction count, but the presence of even minimal turnover indicates that Stacey maintains baseline residential desirability within the Bowes footprint. Prospective buyers or tenants should recognize that evaluating value propositions on this street requires comparative framing against the broader neighbourhood rather than the street's own limited resale history.
Across the Bowes neighbourhood, comparable residential homes have sold at levels that provide context for Stacey Crescent's position within the wider market. The neighbourhood's own transaction activity, while modest relative to higher-turnover streets, offers a stable reference point for home values in the immediate area. Bowes functions as an established residential neighbourhood with baseline demand from both owner-occupants and investors, creating a steady if unspectacular pace. The typical home in the comparable pool trades consistently with neighbourhood expectations, reflecting the stable character of the broader Bowes community.
Stacey Crescent sits in Bowes, a pocket of Milton where the car is the primary tool for getting around. The 401 on-ramp at James Snow Parkway is a four-minute drive, making the highway the natural handle for commutes to Mississauga, Oakville, and Burlington β each within 22 to 24 minutes by car. The Milton GO station is a 16-minute drive, so a rail commute to Toronto runs about 64 minutes door-to-door; it works but requires a drive to the platform. For those heading to Pearson, the drive runs around 32 minutes. The street itself is quiet, a crescent that sees little through traffic, which suits buyers who want highway access without living on a busy road.
Public elementary students on Stacey Crescent draw to Anne J. MacArthur Public School, a six-minute drive, or Tiger Jeet Singh Public School, also six minutes. Robert Baldwin Public School is another option at the same distance. Secondary students attend Milton District High School, a five-minute drive. Catholic catchment includes Our Lady of Fatima Catholic Elementary School at six minutes and Guardian Angels Catholic Elementary School at six minutes, with Bishop P.F. Reding Catholic Secondary School at five minutes. The range of nearby schools gives families several catchment options within a short drive.
Stacey Crescent tends to suit buyers who prioritize highway access over walkability. The street is a quiet crescent in Bowes, with homes that are primarily detached and built in the 1990s. Families who drive to school, to the grocery store, and to the highway will find the layout practical. The tradeoff is that the GO station is a 16-minute drive, so this street works well for those whose daily commute is by car rather than by rail. Buyers who want a suburban setting with mature trees and a crescent layout, and who accept that most errands require a vehicle, will find the street a comfortable fit.
If you're considering alternatives in similar pockets, buyers who want a shorter walk to the GO station might look closer to the Milton GO corridor, where homes are often newer but on tighter lots. Those who prefer a more established neighbourhood with larger lots and mature trees might consider areas built in the 1980s, though those pockets tend to be farther from the 401. For buyers who want newer construction and a more suburban feel with amenities within walking distance, the newer subdivisions near Derry Road offer a different balance. Each option trades off lot size, commute time, and walkability in a distinct way.
Detached inventory on Stacey Crescent is currently active but has thin recent sale history.
No closed sales on record for Stacey Crescent in the recent period.
Rental activity on Stacey Crescent across recent months. Breakdown by bed count below.
| Date | Address | Beds | Sold | vs Ask | DOM | Listing brokerage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Loading sold records⦠| ||||||
A thoughtful conversation grounded in every sale we have tracked on Stacey Crescent.
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