Laughren Crescent is a short residential loop in Milton's Coates neighbourhood, a pocket of the city that took shape in the early 2000s.
Laughren Crescent is a short residential loop in Milton's Coates neighbourhood, a pocket of the city that took shape in the early 2000s. The street sits east of Regional Road 25 and south of Derry Road, placing it within a few minutes of Highway 401. Its layout is typical of the area: a single crescent with no through traffic, lined with detached homes on generous lots. Mature trees and wide boulevards give the street a settled feel, even as the surrounding neighbourhood continues to fill in. Coates Park is a two-minute walk away, and Milton District Hospital is a short drive to the north.
Detached homes define Laughren Crescent. The street's housing stock consists entirely of single-family residences, most built in the mid-2000s. Two-storey plans dominate, with brick-and-stone exteriors and attached two-car garages. Lot sizes are generous for a crescent: frontages typically measure 40 to 50 feet, with deep backyards that allow for pools or gardens. The builder is not attributed with high confidence, but the consistent architectural language suggests a single developer oversaw the crescent's construction.
Homes here trade in the high-$800s to low-$900s, reflecting the balance of size and location. Floor plans tend toward four bedrooms and three bathrooms, with finished basements common. Exterior treatments vary slightly between elevations, but the overall palette is restrained: earth tones, dark roofs, and minimal ornamentation. The street's uniformity gives it a cohesive streetscape, while individual landscaping choices add variety. Most homes have been well maintained, with updated kitchens and bathrooms appearing in several properties.
Coates Park is the closest green space, a two-minute walk from the crescent. It offers a playground, sports fields, and walking paths. For daily errands, Walmart and FreshCo are both a four-minute drive south on Regional Road 25. Sobeys is five minutes away. Milton District Hospital is four minutes north, and several medical clinics are within the same radius.
Schools are well represented. Milton District High School is a four-minute drive, and three public elementary schools (Chris Hadfield, Anne J. MacArthur, Irma Coulson) are within five minutes. Catholic options include Bishop P.F. Reding and St. Francis Xavier secondary schools, each about five minutes away. The Milton GO Station is six minutes by car, with trains to Toronto in just over an hour. Highway 401 access at Regional Road 25 is four minutes away, making commutes to Mississauga, Oakville, and Burlington straightforward.
Laughren Crescent trades rarely, with only a single recorded transaction in the available window. The street sits within the Coates neighbourhood, a predominantly detached-home precinct in Milton's southeast quadrant, and the housing form here reflects that context: the one confirmed transaction involved a detached property, consistent with the lot pattern typical of Coates crescents built during Milton's mid-2000s expansion. With just one active listing currently on the market and no leased properties on record, the street offers almost no quantitative signal on its own. What it does offer is qualitative context: buyers drawn here tend to be owner-occupier families who hold properties for extended periods, which is precisely why resale activity is so thin.
The Coates precinct as a whole attracts buyers who place weight on walkable access to Coates Park, proximity to the Highway 401 interchange a short drive away, and the relative quiet of a crescent layout with limited through-traffic. A buyer evaluating Laughren specifically would be doing so on neighbourhood fundamentals rather than on a dense trade record. That scarcity of turnover, while inconvenient for comparative analysis, itself signals a stable ownership base. Anyone tracking this street would be well-served by monitoring broader Coates detached activity as the nearest proxy for what Laughren homes are likely worth when they do appear.
Laughren Crescent sits in Coates, a pocket of Milton where the daily commute hinges on the 401 ramp at Regional Road 25, a four-minute drive. The Milton GO station is six minutes away, making the Toronto downtown commute a realistic 66-minute door-to-door proposition via GO and TTC. Mississauga runs around 22 minutes by car, Pearson about 32 minutes. The street itself is a quiet crescent, so the road network handles the load without through-traffic noise.
Public elementary catchment draws to Chris Hadfield Public School, Anne J. MacArthur Public School, or Irma Coulson Public School, each about a five-minute drive. Catholic elementary students attend Our Lady of Fatima Catholic Elementary School or St. Scholastica Catholic Elementary School, both roughly six minutes away. Secondary students fall to Milton District High School for public or Bishop P.F. Reding Catholic Secondary School and St. Francis Xavier Catholic Secondary School for Catholic, all within a five-minute drive.
Laughren Crescent suits families who want a detached home in a quiet crescent setting within Coates, a neighbourhood with parks and schools within a short drive. The stock here is exclusively detached, so buyers looking for a single-family home with a yard will find the street aligned with their priorities. The tradeoff is that daily errands require a short drive: the nearest grocery is four minutes away, and the closest park is a two-minute walk. This is a street for those who value a calm residential pocket over walkable commercial convenience.
If you are considering alternatives in similar pockets, think about what matters most. For buyers who want a more walkable setting with shops and transit closer at hand, streets in central Milton tend to offer that tradeoff. Those seeking newer construction might look toward subdivisions built in the late 2010s, where lots are often tighter but finishes are more recent. The key difference is proximity versus quiet: Laughren Crescent leans heavily into the latter.
Detached inventory on Laughren Crescent has seen 1 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 Laughren Crescent.
No closed sales on record for Laughren Crescent 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.
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