Dawson Crescent is a quiet residential loop in Old Milton, one of the town's earliest settled pockets.
Dawson Crescent is a quiet residential loop in Old Milton, one of the town's earliest settled pockets. The street sits just north of Main Street East, within walking distance of Milton District Hospital and several grocery stores. Its short length and cul-de-sac shape keep traffic light, giving the street a distinctly private feel. Mature trees line the roadway, and the lots are generous by modern standards. This is a street where neighbours know each other, and the pace of life is noticeably slower than in newer subdivisions.
The housing stock on Dawson Crescent consists entirely of townhouses, built in the late 1980s and early 1990s. These are freehold units with attached garages, typically spanning 1,400 to 1,600 square feet. The architecture is straightforward: brick and vinyl exteriors, pitched roofs, and front-facing windows that let in ample light. Lots are modest but include private backyards, a rarity for townhomes in this price tier. Homes here trade in the high-$600s to low-$700s, reflecting the street's established character and central location.
The townhomes are arranged in clusters of four to six units, each with its own driveway and small front lawn. Interiors tend to feature open-concept main floors with eat-in kitchens, while upstairs holds three bedrooms and two bathrooms. Basements are unfinished in many units, offering expansion potential. The street's consistent upkeep is evident: roofs are recent, driveways are well-maintained, and landscaping is tidy. For buyers seeking a turnkey townhome in a mature setting, Dawson Crescent delivers without compromise.
Dawson Crescent is a two-minute walk from Rotary Park, a large green space with sports fields, a playground, and walking trails. The Milton District Hospital is also two minutes away by car, providing peace of mind. Grocery shopping is convenient: Walmart, FreshCo, and Sobeys are all within a three-minute drive. For families, Robert Baldwin Public School is directly across the street, and Milton District High School is a short walk or bike ride away.
The Milton GO Station is a 14-minute drive, but Highway 401 is just three minutes from the street, making the commute to Mississauga or Toronto straightforward. The Milton Muslim Community Centre is three minutes away by car. For outdoor enthusiasts, Kelso Conservation Area is an eight-minute drive, offering hiking, skiing, and a beach in summer. The street's location puts daily essentials within easy reach while keeping the residential setting calm and removed from major thoroughfares.
Dawson Crescent trades rarely, with only a handful of recorded transactions over the past year. The street's limited activity reflects its tight supply and the specific appeal of townhouse living in Old Milton, where inventory rarely surfaces. Days on market average around 105 days, a pace that suggests measured buyer interest rather than urgency; the single active listing indicates the street remains sparse. A three-bedroom townhouse rented at approximately 2,750 per month during the recent window, anchoring the rental profile for comparable units on the street. The neighbourhood context matters here: comparable townhouses across Old Milton settle around the mid-$640s, with prices having softened modestly year-over-year. Sold-to-ask ratios near 98 per cent across the neighbourhood suggest buyers and sellers find alignment without protracted negotiation, a signal of stable underlying value despite thin transaction volume on Dawson itself. For buyers drawn to townhouse living with Old Milton's neighbourhood character and proximity to Robert Baldwin PS and Rotary Park, the street's scarcity of listings can feel constraining, yet that very scarcity has historically supported consistent pricing in the surrounding area.
Across Old Milton, comparable townhouse homes have moved through a stable trade pattern. The neighbourhood's typical townhouse settles near 645,000, with a full sample of recent transactions informing this picture. Year-over-year, prices have softened modestly by approximately 8 per cent, a gentle decline that reflects broader market conditions rather than neighbourhood-specific strain. Sold-to-ask ratios sit near 98 per cent, indicating that buyers and sellers across the neighbourhood reach agreement without substantial discounting. Days on market average around 88 days neighbourhood-wide, running somewhat faster than Dawson Crescent's own pace, which may reflect the broader supply of comparable units available beyond this single street.
Dawson Crescent sits in Old Milton, a position that makes the 401 the primary commute handle. The on-ramp at Regional Road 25 is a three-minute drive, putting Mississauga within 22 minutes and Pearson within 32. For the Toronto commute, the GO station is a 14-minute drive; the total trip to Union runs around 74 minutes. The street itself is a quiet crescent, so the road network handles the load without through-traffic noise. Burlington and Oakville are both reachable in about 20 to 24 minutes by car, making this a practical base for those working across the western GTA.
Public elementary catchment falls to Robert Baldwin Public School, which sits directly on the crescent — a walk of less than a minute for families at the southern end. Catholic elementary students draw to Guardian Angels Catholic Elementary School, a five-minute drive. For secondary, public students attend Milton District High School, three minutes by car, while Catholic students go to St. Kateri Tekakwitha Catholic Secondary School, about eight minutes away. The proximity to Robert Baldwin makes Dawson a natural fit for families with young children who value a school within sight of home.
Dawson Crescent tends to suit buyers who want the established feel of Old Milton with the convenience of nearby amenities. The townhouse stock appeals to first-time buyers, downsizers, and those looking for lower-maintenance living without sacrificing proximity to the 401 and Milton District Hospital. Families with elementary-aged children will appreciate Robert Baldwin Public School being essentially on the street. The rental market here is quiet — the single recent lease was unfurnished and moved quickly, suggesting long-term anchored tenants rather than transient demand. Buyers here accept a slightly longer GO commute in exchange for being in a mature pocket with walkable parks and grocery stores.
If a detached home with more space is the priority, Wellwood Terrace offers detached properties trading around $1.7M, a step up in both price and square footage. For those seeking a mix of detached and townhouse options, Apple Terrace shows a similar mixed profile with prices around $1.6M. Both streets sit in comparable pockets of Old Milton, so the tradeoff is primarily about property type and budget rather than neighbourhood character. If a shorter GO commute matters more, streets closer to Milton GO Station would be worth exploring, though they tend to trade at a premium.
Townhouse inventory on Dawson Crescent 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 Dawson Crescent.
Sale activity on Dawson Crescent in the recent period. Stats reflect closed transactions only.
Rental activity on Dawson Crescent across recent months. Breakdown by bed count below.
| Date | Address | Beds | Sold | vs Ask | DOM | Listing brokerage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Times below assume typical traffic from mid-street. Walk and transit times use Milton Transit routing.
All current listings on Dawson Crescent. Click through for the full listing detail and photos.
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