Harvest Drive runs through Bronte Meadows, a residential pocket in Milton's southwest quadrant.
Harvest Drive runs through Bronte Meadows, a residential pocket in Milton's southwest quadrant. The street is quiet and primarily residential, lined with mature trees and well-kept lawns. It sits a short drive from the commercial corridor along Main Street East, where grocery stores and services cluster. To the north, Centennial Park and Milton Community Park offer open green space. The street's position places it within easy reach of Highway 401, making it a practical choice for commuters. Harvest Drive feels settled, not new, with a sense of established community.
Homes on Harvest Drive are predominantly detached, two-storey houses built in the late 1990s and early 2000s. The typical lot is a standard 40-foot frontage, with homes offering three to four bedrooms and two-car garages. Brick and vinyl siding are the dominant exterior treatments, with a mix of neutral tones. The street's housing stock is consistent in era and scale, giving it a cohesive streetscape.
Inside, floor plans tend toward open-concept main levels with family rooms off the kitchen. Many homes have been updated with hardwood floors, renovated kitchens, or finished basements. The condition across the street is generally well-maintained, with few signs of deferred upkeep. Townhomes are absent here; the street is exclusively detached, which appeals to families seeking space and privacy. Trade prices for these homes typically settle in the high-$700s to mid-$800s, reflecting the established character of the neighbourhood.
Daily errands are easily managed from Harvest Drive. Sobeys and Walmart are within a five-minute drive, and FreshCo and Canadian Superstore are close behind. Milton District Hospital is four minutes by car, a reassuring presence for families. Several parks, including Centennial Park and Milton Community Park, are a short drive away and offer sports fields, playgrounds, and walking trails.
Public schools in the area include E.W. Foster Public School and W.I. Dick Middle School, both within a five-minute drive. Catholic options include Guardian Angels Catholic Elementary School and St. Kateri Tekakwitha Catholic Secondary School. The Milton GO Station is a 19-minute drive, but Highway 401 is just five minutes away, making car commuting straightforward. For daily needs, the street's location is practical without being overly busy.
Harvest Drive sits inside Bronte Meadows and trades rarely enough that quantitative pattern-reading is not the right tool here. Recorded activity over the past year is limited to a handful of touches, which is the usual signature of a street where owners settle in and stay. Turnover is shallow because the holding behaviour is long, not because demand is absent. When something does come available, the audience tends to be specific rather than broad, and the deal forms around suitability rather than competitive bidding pressure.
The street reads as a settled detached pocket within an older Milton neighbourhood, the kind of address where the buyer profile leans toward families looking for a quieter interior street with established trees and a short reach to E.W. Foster PS, W.I. Dick Middle School, and Milton District Hospital. Sobeys and the Highway 401 onramp at Regional Road 25 are both inside a short drive, which keeps the street practical without putting it on a thoroughfare. Harvest is the kind of street buyers find when they have already decided they want Bronte Meadows specifically. The thin trade record reflects that self-selection. People who land here are not casually shopping the wider Milton market; they are choosing this neighbourhood character on its own terms, and they tend to commit when the right house surfaces rather than waiting for a deeper field of options to compare against.
Across Bronte Meadows, comparable detached homes follow the pattern of an established Milton neighbourhood where turnover is steady but not heavy. The broader area carries the character of mature lots, settled streetscapes, and owners who tend to hold for longer cycles, which is why the comparable read at neighbourhood scope tends to look more orderly than dramatic. Buyers shopping detached homes across Bronte Meadows generally encounter a measured pace and a familiar inventory profile, which gives Harvest itself a reasonable interpretive frame even when its own trade record is too thin to anchor specific observations.
Harvest Drive sits in Bronte Meadows, a position that makes the 401 the primary artery for most commutes. The on-ramp at Regional Road 25 is roughly five minutes away, putting Mississauga within a 22-minute drive and Pearson within 32. For those heading to Toronto, the Milton GO station is a 19-minute drive; the combined trip to Union runs just over an hour. Burlington and Oakville are both reachable in about 20 to 25 minutes by car. The street itself is quiet, with local traffic only, so the road network handles the load without the noise of a busier corridor.
Public elementary catchment draws to E.W. Foster Public School, a four-minute drive, and Sam Sherratt Public School, about five minutes away. Catholic elementary students attend Guardian Angels Catholic Elementary School, also a five-minute drive. For secondary, Catholic students draw to St. Kateri Tekakwitha Catholic Secondary School, roughly eight minutes by car. The area is well served by multiple elementary options within a short drive, which suits families with younger children.
Harvest Drive tends to suit families who prioritize proximity to the 401 and the convenience of nearby shopping and parks. The street is quiet, with minimal through traffic, which appeals to those with young children. Buyers here typically accept a longer drive to the GO station in exchange for a more suburban, residential feel and quick access to major highways. The rental market on Harvest is limited, with few recent lease records, suggesting a stable owner-occupied character. This is a street for households that value space and access over walkability to transit.
If you're considering alternatives in similar pockets, homes built in the early 2000s with larger lots can be found in other parts of Bronte Meadows, offering more square footage for a similar price. For those who want closer proximity to the GO station, streets nearer to Milton's core tend to trade at a premium but cut the commute to Union significantly. Buyers seeking newer construction may look toward subdivisions built in the 2010s, where floor plans are more open and lots are tighter. Each option shifts the tradeoff between space, age, and commute time.
Detached inventory on Harvest Drive is currently active but has thin recent sale history.
Closed transactions from the Toronto Regional Real Estate Board. The picture below covers recent closed activity across all product types on Harvest Drive.
No closed sales on record for Harvest Drive in the recent period.
| 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 Harvest Drive. Click through for the full listing detail and photos.
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