Giddings Crescent is a quiet, residential loop in Milton's Scott neighbourhood.
Giddings Crescent is a quiet, residential loop in Milton's Scott neighbourhood. The street sits south of Derry Road, just west of Thompson Road South, in a pocket of the city that feels removed from the main arterial hum. Mature trees line the crescent, and the lots are generous for a newer subdivision. Sam Sherratt Public School sits at the crescent's entrance, anchoring the block with a daily rhythm of foot traffic and school buses. The street's shape discourages through-traffic, giving it a cul-de-sac calm that families prize. It is a short drive to Milton District Hospital and the Milton GO station, making it practical without sacrificing privacy.
Giddings Crescent is a mix of detached houses and semi-detached homes, all built in the early 2000s. The semis are the more common typology, typically two-storey with three bedrooms and a single-car garage. Detached homes on the crescent are slightly larger, offering four bedrooms and double-wide driveways. Lot widths run from 30 to 40 feet, with rear yards that accommodate a patio and a stretch of grass. The builder is not attributed with high confidence, but the homes share a consistent architectural vocabulary: brick and vinyl exteriors, gabled roofs, and front porches that vary from shallow stoops to full-width covered entries.
Exterior treatments lean toward neutral earth tones, with occasional stone accents on the front elevation. Floor plans follow a standard open-concept layout: kitchen and family room at the rear, living and dining at the front. Many homes have finished basements, often with a separate entrance, and several have been updated with hardwood floors and modern kitchen finishes. The street's age means the original finishes are now two decades old, and a number of homes have undergone thoughtful renovations. The overall condition is solid, with well-maintained landscaping and few signs of deferred maintenance.
Giddings Crescent is within a five-minute drive of several parks, including Willmott Park and Milton Community Park, both with playgrounds and sports fields. The Milton GO Station is five minutes by car, offering a 65-minute commute to downtown Toronto via GO and TTC. Highway 401 is four minutes from the on-ramp at Regional Road 25, providing quick access to Mississauga, Oakville, and Burlington. Milton District Hospital is three minutes away, and the Milton Muslim Community Centre is a three-minute drive.
Grocery shopping is convenient with Sobeys, Walmart, and FreshCo all within four minutes. For daily errands, the plaza at Derry and Thompson covers most needs. The street's position in Scott means it is close to both the older commercial strips along Main Street and the newer big-box developments near the 401. It is a location that balances suburban convenience with a degree of separation from the busiest corridors.
Giddings Crescent trades infrequently; the five sales recorded over the available history represent a thin market where each transaction carries outsized weight. A detached three-bedroom rented around $4,000 per month in May 2026, while a four-bedroom detached unit leased for $3,300 in December 2025. Basement units on the street move into rental inventory in the $1,850 to $2,000 range, reflecting the sharp differentiation between full units and ancillary space. The lease activity clusters around three-bedroom homes at a typical rent near $2,600 per month against four-bedroom units near $3,400, suggesting gross yields in the 3 percent range when paired against historical sale prices.
Sale prices have moved unevenly across the available window. Q3 2024 settled around $1,100,000, softened to $1,100,000 in Q2 2025, then moved back up to $1,050,000 in Q1 2026. The compressed recent range and thin transaction count indicate a street where buyer activity is measured and supply remains limited; only one unit is currently active. Days on market data for lease transactions average in the mid-30s, with outliers reaching into the 40-day range, suggesting rental demand is present but not urgent. The property-type split shows semi-detached units dominating lease volume while detached homes anchor the sale side, a pattern typical of streets where ground-floor ownership and rental subdivision occur across different building forms.
Across the Scott neighbourhood, comparable semi-detached homes have traded around $875,000 over the recent period. The sample of 134 transactions provides a robust read on local pattern; the neighbourhood-wide typical has remained nearly level year over year, with prices holding steady. Seller concessions are modest; comparable units have sold at approximately 97 percent of asking price, indicating a balanced market where negotiations occur but do not typically result in heavy discounting. Neighbourhood-wide days on market for comparable semi-detached homes run around 106 days, a pace notably slower than typical lease absorption on Giddings itself, signalling that rental conversions move faster than ownership transitions in this immediate area.
Giddings Crescent sits in the Scott neighbourhood, a position that makes the Milton GO Station the realistic Toronto commute — a five-minute drive puts Union under an hour and fifteen minutes total. For those working in Mississauga, the 401 ramp at Regional Road 25 is a four-minute drive and handles the daily run in about 22 minutes. Pearson is a half-hour drive via the 401. The street itself is a quiet crescent, so the road network carries the load without through-traffic noise.
Public elementary catchment falls to Sam Sherratt Public School, which sits directly on the crescent; Catholic students attend Our Lady of Fatima Catholic Elementary or St. Scholastica Catholic Elementary, both within a five-minute drive. Secondary students draw to Craig Kielburger Secondary School, the dominant public catchment for this part of Scott, about five minutes by car. Catholic secondary students attend Bishop P.F. Reding Catholic Secondary School, a four-minute drive.
Giddings Crescent tends to suit families looking for a quiet crescent with direct access to schools and parks. The stock is a mix of semis and detached homes, which draws buyers who want a modest footprint without the premium of larger lots. The rental market here is anchored by long-term tenants — all recent leases were unfurnished with 12-month terms, and most moved within a month of listing, signalling steady demand from families who plan to stay. The tradeoff is proximity to amenities: grocery and hospital are a short drive, but the street itself offers little walkable retail.
If you're considering alternatives in similar pockets, homes built in the early 2000s with larger lots may suit buyers who want more outdoor space. For those who prioritize walkable retail and a denser feel, newer subdivisions closer to Milton's core amenities might be a better fit. The tradeoff on Giddings is quiet and school proximity; if a faster commute to Toronto is the priority, streets nearer the GO station or the 401 on-ramp could be worth exploring.
Detached inventory on Giddings Crescent has seen 2 closed sales recently. Details below.
Semi inventory on Giddings Crescent has seen 3 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 Giddings Crescent.
No closed sales on record for Giddings Crescent in the recent period.
Rental activity on Giddings Crescent across recent months. Breakdown by bed count below.
Typical sold price across all product types on Giddings Crescent, plotted with transaction volume.
| 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 Giddings Crescent. Click through for the full listing detail and photos.
A thoughtful conversation grounded in every sale we have tracked on Giddings Crescent.
Request a valuationPrivate access to new and upcoming listings before they go public.
Set an alert