Syer Drive runs through the Timberlea neighbourhood in north Milton, a residential pocket shaped in the early 2000s.
Syer Drive runs through the Timberlea neighbourhood in north Milton, a residential pocket shaped in the early 2000s. The street is a quiet, tree-lined drive with a mix of detached homes set back from the road. It sits within walking distance of two public schools and a short drive from the Milton GO Station. The surrounding area is defined by family homes, parks, and the convenience of nearby shopping along Main Street. Syer offers a settled, suburban rhythm without the traffic of a through route.
Detached homes dominate Syer Drive, with two-storey designs typical of the early-2000s build cycle. Floor plans generally offer three to four bedrooms and two-car garages. Lot sizes are generous for the area, with frontages around 40 feet and depths extending to 110 feet. The builder is Mattamy, whose standard elevations from that period feature brick and vinyl siding combinations in neutral tones.
Homes on Syer tend to trade in the low- to mid-$1Ms, reflecting the size and condition of the stock. Many properties have seen updates to kitchens and flooring over the past decade. Exteriors are well maintained, with mature landscaping and concrete driveways common. The street's uniformity in era and builder gives it a cohesive look, though individual upgrades create subtle variation from house to house.
Syer Drive is a short walk from E.W. Foster Public School and W.I. Dick Middle School, both within the same block. For groceries, Sobeys Milton is a four-minute drive west, and Walmart Milton is five minutes east. Milton District Hospital is four minutes by car, providing peace of mind for families. The Milton GO Station is six minutes away, with regular trains to Toronto's Union Station.
Several parks lie within a five- to seven-minute drive, including Coates Park and Centennial Park, each with playgrounds and sports fields. The Milton Muslim Community Centre is five minutes away. Highway 401 access at Regional Road 25 is five minutes from the street, making commutes to Mississauga or Oakville straightforward. The area's schools, parks, and retail anchors make Syer a practical choice for families.
Syer Drive trades rarely, with only a handful of recorded transactions over the past year. The street consists entirely of detached homes, and activity has been sparse enough that typical price and range figures fall below the threshold for quantitative analysis. What limited trade data exists suggests a modest street where owner-occupied detached housing forms the dominant pattern. Buyers drawn to Syer typically seek the quieter residential character of Timberlea, a neighbourhood where similar detached homes have moved through comparable cycles. The single active listing on the street at present reflects the overall thin supply, with days on market averaging around 92 days, indicating a pace neither rushed nor prolonged. The few transactions that have occurred suggest homes on this street appeal to a steady owner-occupant base rather than investor-driven demand. Condition and property positioning matter significantly in this market, as they do across Timberlea's detached inventory. The street's proximity to established schools and parks, combined with accessible commute options to downtown Toronto, aligns with the profile of families and professionals who typically populate this neighbourhood.
Across Timberlea, comparable detached homes have traded at a typical price around $1.1M over the past year, reflecting the broader neighbourhood character that encompasses both established and newer subdivisions. The sample of 104 recent sales across the neighbourhood provides solid visibility into typical market behaviour for this property type. Year-over-year, prices in the neighbourhood softened modestly, with comparable detached homes declining roughly 1.8 percent from the prior twelve months. Buyers paying near ask have been the norm, with a sold-to-ask ratio near 0.99, indicating a relatively balanced negotiation dynamic where homes priced appropriately tend to clear without heavy discounting. Days on market across the neighbourhood average around 99 days for comparable detached inventory, a pace consistent with Syer's own recent activity, suggesting the street trades in rhythm with its broader Timberlea context.
Syer Drive sits in Timberlea, a position that makes the Milton GO station the realistic Toronto commute — a six-minute drive puts Union under 70 minutes total. For those working in Mississauga, the 401 ramp at Regional Road 25 is five minutes away, making the drive a manageable 22 minutes. Pearson is reachable in just over half an hour. The street itself is quiet, with through-traffic routed to the main arterials, so the road network handles the load without the noise of a busier corridor.
Public elementary catchment falls to E.W. Foster Public School, walkable from Syer's southern end; W.I. Dick Middle School is also within walking distance. Catholic elementary students draw to Our Lady of Fatima or Guardian Angels, both a five-minute drive. Secondary students attend Milton District High School (public) or Bishop P.F. Reding Catholic Secondary School, each roughly five minutes by car. The concentration of schools within a short radius makes this a practical stretch for families routing multiple children to different boards.
Syer Drive tends to suit families who want a quiet, established pocket of Timberlea with detached homes and good school access. The stock is primarily detached, built in a period that appeals to buyers who prefer mature landscaping and larger lots over new-subdivision density. The tradeoff is that the street sees limited turnover — homes that come up tend to find buyers within a few months, suggesting steady demand from those who know the area. Renters are rare here; the street is dominated by owner-occupants, which reinforces the settled, low-turnover character. Buyers who value a consistent neighbourhood fabric and proximity to schools without being on a main road will find Syer a natural fit.
If you're considering alternatives in similar pockets, Martin Street offers a different profile — its mix includes condos trading around $310K, which suits buyers looking for lower entry points or a more diverse housing stock. Syer is purely detached, so those seeking attached or condo options will find Martin a practical alternative. The school catchment shifts slightly, but both streets sit within the same general Timberlea area, so the commute and amenity access remain comparable.
Detached inventory on Syer Drive has seen 2 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 Syer Drive.
Sale activity on Syer Drive in the recent period. Stats reflect closed transactions only.
| 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 Syer Drive. Click through for the full listing detail and photos.
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