Shortreed Crescent is a quiet residential loop in the Coates neighbourhood of north Milton.
Shortreed Crescent is a quiet residential loop in the Coates neighbourhood of north Milton. The street sits east of Thompson Road South, just north of Main Street East, in a pocket defined by mature trees and consistent townhouse development. It is a short street, with a single entry point and no through traffic, which gives it a private, almost cul-de-sac character. The surrounding area is predominantly residential, with Coates Park immediately to the east and Milton District Hospital a few minutes south. This is a street that feels settled and family-oriented, with sidewalks and green verges lining both sides.
Shortreed Crescent is composed entirely of townhouses, a uniform stock that gives the street a cohesive look. The homes are two-storey freehold units, typically with attached garages and small front yards. They were built in the early 2000s, part of the broader Coates development that filled this section of Milton. Exteriors are a mix of brick and siding, with consistent rooflines and window proportions. The street's layout is a gentle curve, with homes set back from the road by a short driveway and a narrow strip of lawn.
Floor plans on Shortreed generally offer three bedrooms and two and a half bathrooms, with finished basements in many units. Some end units have slightly larger lots and additional windows. The condition across the street is well-maintained, with several homes showing updated kitchens and bathrooms. Townhouses in this pocket trade in the high-$700s to low-$800s, reflecting the area's steady demand. The street's uniformity appeals to buyers seeking a predictable, low-maintenance property in a quiet setting.
Shortreed Crescent is within a short walk of Coates Park, a neighbourhood green space with a playground and open fields. The Milton District Hospital is a four-minute drive south, and several grocery options including Walmart and FreshCo are within five minutes by car. The Milton GO Station is six minutes away, offering a direct rail connection to downtown Toronto in just over an hour. Highway 401 access at Regional Road 25 is four minutes from the street, making commutes to Mississauga, Oakville, and Burlington straightforward.
For daily errands, the plaza at Thompson and Main has a pharmacy, a bank, and a handful of quick-service restaurants. Several public and Catholic elementary schools are within a five-minute drive, as is Milton District High School. The Milton Muslim Community Centre is four minutes away. The street's location places it close to the essentials without the noise of a major arterial road.
Shortreed Crescent trades infrequently. Four sales and three leases across the available window establish a thin pattern; the street's supply base is small, and transaction flow does not produce reliable price aggregation. The crescent consists primarily of townhouses, a property type that dominates the residential character. With only one active listing on the market currently, supply is tight, which typically extends buyer decision timelines when suitable units do appear. The absence of specific price data reflects the sparsity of recent comparable transactions on the street itself; reliance on neighbourhood-level pricing (detailed below) is therefore more informative for current valuation context.
Across the Coates neighbourhood, comparable townhouses have traded around $775,000 over the recent year, with 112 sales establishing a robust sample. The neighbourhood price has softened approximately 6 percent year-over-year, indicating a cooling phase in the townhouse market across this broader area. Properties are moving near asking price, with a sold-to-ask ratio near 0.99, suggesting minimal negotiation room; buyers in this segment are not extracting meaningful discounts. Neighbourhood-wide days on market average around 89 days, a pace that reflects measured but not sluggish buyer movement. On Shortreed Crescent itself, two-bedroom units are leasing around $2,700 per month and three-bedroom units around $3,200 per month, which against the $775,000 neighbourhood sale price implies gross rental yields near 4.2 to 4.9 percent, consistent with single-family rental expectations in the Coates area.
Shortreed Crescent sits in Coates, a pocket of Milton that trades proximity to the 401 for a quieter residential rhythm. The on-ramp at Regional Road 25 is a four-minute drive, making Mississauga a 22-minute run and Pearson reachable in just over half an hour. For the Toronto commute, the Milton GO station is six minutes by car; the full trip to Union Station runs just over an hour. The street itself sees little through traffic, which suits families who value a calm street over immediate highway access.
Public elementary students draw to Chris Hadfield Public School, a five-minute drive that serves much of Coates. Catholic elementary students attend Our Lady of Fatima or St. Scholastica, both roughly six minutes away. Secondary catchment falls to Milton District High School for the public board and Bishop P.F. Reding or St. Francis Xavier for Catholic families, each within a five-minute drive. The cluster of schools within a short radius makes this a practical stretch for families with children at different stages.
Shortreed Crescent tends to suit families and first-time buyers drawn to the townhouse stock and the Coates neighbourhood's established feel. The street's position near the 401 and GO station works for commuters who need Mississauga or Toronto access but prefer a quieter street over a busier corridor. The rental segment here leans toward long-term tenants, with mostly unfurnished units and steady turnover; that signals a stable rental base rather than transient demand. Buyers here accept a slightly longer drive to the GO station in exchange for a crescent that feels removed from the main arteries.
If you're considering alternatives in similar pockets, buyers who want a shorter walk to the GO station might look closer to Milton's core, where the tradeoff is more street noise and tighter lots. Those who prioritize newer construction could explore the subdivisions farther north, where homes built in the 2010s offer open-concept layouts but less mature tree cover. For a larger lot or a detached home, the older sections of Coates with wider frontages and pie-shaped lots are worth a look, though they come with a higher entry price.
Townhouse inventory on Shortreed Crescent has seen 4 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 Shortreed Crescent.
No closed sales on record for Shortreed Crescent in the recent period.
Rental activity on Shortreed 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 Shortreed Crescent. Click through for the full listing detail and photos.
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