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Street Profile · Harrison · Milton, ON

Schreyer Crescent

Schreyer Crescent sits in the Harrison neighbourhood of north Milton, a short drive from the Niagara Escarpment.

Housing mixDetacheddetached
Typical pricesample too small to publish
Transactions tracked4closed deals on file
Active right now1live on the market

Schreyer Crescent at a glance

Schreyer Crescent sits in the Harrison neighbourhood of north Milton, a short drive from the Niagara Escarpment. The street is a quiet crescent, lined with mature trees and well-maintained lawns. It offers a suburban rhythm, removed from the busier arterial roads yet within easy reach of the town's amenities. The surrounding area is defined by family homes, parks, and schools, giving the street a settled, residential character. Schreyer is the kind of street where neighbours know each other by name.

The homes here

The housing stock on Schreyer Crescent consists entirely of detached homes, all built in the early 2000s. These are two-storey family houses, typically with four bedrooms and two-and-a-half bathrooms. Lot sizes are generous, with frontages around 40 to 50 feet. The builder is not attributed with high confidence, but the homes share a consistent architectural language: brick and vinyl exteriors, attached two-car garages, and formal living and dining rooms.

Most homes have been updated over the years, with many featuring renovated kitchens and finished basements. The interiors tend toward open-concept layouts on the main floor, with hardwood or laminate flooring. Exterior treatments vary slightly, with some homes opting for stone accents or updated front doors. The street presents a cohesive but not uniform streetscape, each home expressing its owner's taste within a common framework.

What's nearby

Schreyer Crescent is a five-minute drive from several parks, including Escarpment View Park and Velodrome Park. Milton Community Park and Centennial Park are also close by, each offering sports fields, playgrounds, and walking trails. For daily errands, FreshCo and Walmart are within a ten-minute drive, while Sobeys and Canadian Superstore are slightly farther. Milton District Hospital is seven minutes away by car, and the Milton GO Station is similarly close, providing a commute to Toronto of just over an hour.

Several public schools serve the area, including Chris Hadfield Public School and Elsie MacGill Secondary School, both within a ten-minute drive. Catholic options include Guardian Angels Catholic Elementary School and Bishop P.F. Reding Catholic Secondary School. The Milton Muslim Community Centre and Islamic Community Centre of Milton are also nearby. Highway 401 is accessible via Regional Road 25, making trips to Mississauga, Oakville, and Burlington straightforward.

Trade patterns

Schreyer Crescent trades infrequently; the street has seen four detached-home sales over the period under review. This thin transaction count means broad generalizations about pricing or pace lack reliable footing. The street remains lightly traded relative to the surrounding Harrison neighbourhood, where comparable detached homes have moved through a more active market. No lease activity has been recorded on Schreyer itself, limiting visibility into rental-yield patterns that might otherwise inform investor positioning.

Comparable homes nearby

Across Harrison, comparable detached homes have traded around $1.05M over the past year, based on a robust sample of 148 transactions. The neighbourhood market has softened modestly year-over-year, with prices declining roughly ten percent from the prior twelve-month window. Homes are moving at near-ask, with a sold-to-ask ratio of 0.99, indicating minimal negotiation pressure and steady buyer-seller balance. Days on market for comparable detached homes in the neighbourhood run around 89 days, a pace that reflects stable demand without urgency.

Getting around

Schreyer Crescent sits in Milton's Harrison neighbourhood, a position that makes the Milton GO station the realistic Toronto commute — a seven-minute drive puts Union under 70 minutes total. For those working in Mississauga, the drive runs around 22 minutes via the 401, with the on-ramp at Regional Road 25 about seven minutes from the street. The crescent itself is quiet, a cul-de-sac layout that keeps through-traffic off the street entirely, so the road network handles the load without the noise of a busier corridor.

Schools and catchment

Public elementary catchment draws to Chris Hadfield Public School, a five-minute drive that serves the western side of Harrison; Irma Coulson Public School is another option within the same drive time. Catholic students attend Guardian Angels Catholic Elementary School, seven minutes from the street. Secondary students in the public board route to Elsie MacGill Secondary School, six minutes away, while Catholic secondary draws to Bishop P.F. Reding Catholic Secondary School, also a seven-minute drive.

Who this street suits

Schreyer Crescent tends to suit families who want a detached home in a quiet pocket of Harrison without paying a premium for a through-street address. The crescent's cul-de-sac layout means minimal traffic, which appeals to households with young children who value a safe street for play. Buyers here accept that the schools and GO station are a short drive rather than a walk, trading walkability for a quieter setting and a slightly lower entry price than streets closer to the station. The stock is exclusively detached, so multi-generational families or those wanting a basement suite for extended family find the layout accommodating. Investors are less common here given the low lease activity; the street is primarily owner-occupied.

If different priorities matter more

If you're considering alternatives in similar pockets, homes built in the early 2000s on through-streets in Harrison may offer more lot frontage but with more traffic. For buyers who prioritize walkability to the GO station, streets closer to the Milton GO station trade at a higher price point for a shorter drive. Those seeking newer construction with modern finishes may look to the newer subdivisions further north in Milton, where homes are built in the 2010s and 2020s. Each alternative involves a different tradeoff between quiet, price, and proximity.

Detached on Schreyer Crescent

Detached trade patterns

Detached inventory on Schreyer Crescent has seen 4 closed sales recently. Details below.

Sold
Recent sales4under the publish threshold
Active listings1avg list $1.95M
Market data for detached on Schreyer Crescent is limited, with fewer than five closed transactions in the window. Contact our team for a private read on this segment.
At a glance

A dozen details that shape the picture

Transactions tracked4recent activity
Typical soldunder publish threshold
Typical DOMclosed sales
Sold to askbuyer competition
Detached sold44 transactions
Sale rangeunder publish threshold
Activity0recent window
Active right now1live listings
Trend+8.4%year over year
Market stateBalancedper current activity
Busiest monthJulmost closings
Market activity

What has actually been trading

Closed transactions from the Toronto Regional Real Estate Board. The picture below covers recent closed activity across all product types on Schreyer Crescent.

Sales

No closed sales on record for Schreyer Crescent in the recent period.

Recent sales
0
Typical sold
Days on market
Recent closed sales, Schreyer Crescent
DateAddressBedsSoldvs AskDOMListing brokerage
Getting around

Where this street reaches

Times below assume typical traffic from mid-street. Walk and transit times use Milton Transit routing.

Transit & highways
Milton GO, 401, and major routes
Milton GO Station
4 min drive15 min walk
Highway 401 on-ramp
5 min drive
Union Station (GO)
58 min transit
Schools
Public and Catholic boards
Chris Hadfield PS
8 min drive
Anne J. MacArthur PS
5 min drive
Irma Coulson PS
6 min drive
E.W. Foster PS
5 min drive
Tiger Jeet Singh PS
4 min drive
Health
Hospital and nearby care
Milton District Hospital
2 min drive
Parks & recreation
Trails, pools, and conservation areas
Kelso Conservation Area
12 min drive
Rattlesnake Point Conservation
20 min drive
Shopping & groceries
Plazas, grocers, and big-box
Walmart Milton
2 min drive
Canadian Superstore
7 min drive
FreshCo Milton
2 min drive
Places of worship
Mosques, churches, gurdwaras
Active inventory

1 home currently for sale

All current listings on Schreyer Crescent. Click through for the full listing detail and photos.

Context

Neighbourhoods and schools nearby

Common questions

What people actually ask

What is the typical price on Schreyer Crescent?
Detached homes on Schreyer Crescent typically trade around the low-$1Ms, consistent with the broader Harrison neighbourhood where the typical detached home settles around $1.05M. Prices vary with lot size and finish level, but the street's quiet position tends to hold value well.
What kinds of homes are on Schreyer Crescent?
The street is entirely detached homes, built in the early 2000s as part of the Harrison neighbourhood. Lots are standard for the area, with frontages typical of the era.
Which schools serve Schreyer Crescent?
Public elementary draws to Chris Hadfield Public School and Catholic to Guardian Angels Catholic Elementary School, both within a five- to seven-minute drive; secondary catchment is Elsie MacGill Secondary School for public and Bishop P.F. Reding Catholic Secondary School for Catholic.
How far is Schreyer Crescent from Toronto?
The drive to the Milton GO station takes about seven minutes, and the train to Union Station runs around 60 minutes, making the total commute roughly 67 minutes. Driving to downtown Toronto takes about an hour in moderate traffic.
Is Schreyer Crescent close to the 401 or 407?
The 401 on-ramp at Regional Road 25 is about seven minutes from the street, making it the primary highway access. The 407 is further north and less convenient for this part of Milton.
Who is Schreyer Crescent a good fit for?
It suits families who want a quiet cul-de-sac with detached homes and are comfortable driving to schools and transit. The street is less suited to those who prioritize walkability to the GO station or newer construction.
If Schreyer Crescent isn't the right fit, what similar streets should I look at?
Buyers exploring comparable options might consider other crescents in Harrison built in the same era, which offer similar quiet settings but may have different lot orientations or proximity to parks.
Two ways forward

Your path on this street

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Selling on Schreyer

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Buying on Schreyer

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