Beaty Trail runs through the Beaty neighbourhood in north Milton, a street shaped by the late-2000s building cycle that defined this part of town.
Beaty Trail runs through the Beaty neighbourhood in north Milton, a street shaped by the late-2000s building cycle that defined this part of town. It sits east of Thompson Road South and north of Derry Road, within a grid of crescents and cul-de-sacs that give the area a quiet, suburban rhythm. The street is primarily residential, lined with detached homes on standard lots. Sidewalks run along both sides, and the occasional mature tree softens the streetscape. The Milton Sports Centre lies a short drive south, and several elementary schools are within walking distance. Beaty Trail is the kind of street where morning commuters head toward Highway 401 and evening traffic returns to driveways and garage doors.
Homes on Beaty Trail are almost entirely detached, built in the late 2000s and early 2010s. The dominant builder is Mattamy, whose standard floor plans appear across the street: two-storey elevations with brick-and-vinyl exteriors, attached two-car garages, and main-floor layouts that favour open-concept living. Lot widths typically measure 36 to 40 feet, with depths around 100 feet. Interior square footage ranges from roughly 2,000 to 2,500 square feet, with four bedrooms and two-and-a-half bathrooms as the standard configuration.
The street shows consistent architectural treatment. Brick colours shift from tan to deep red across neighbouring houses, but the rooflines and window placements repeat with minor variation. Some homes have stone accents on the front elevation; others keep a simpler brick face. Driveways are concrete, and front lawns are narrow but maintained. A few homes have upgraded their front doors or added porch columns, but most remain close to the original build specification. The overall impression is one of orderly repetition, a street built to a plan and largely unchanged since.
Daily errands on Beaty Trail centre on the commercial strip along Derry Road, four minutes by car. Walmart and FreshCo sit side by side, and Sobeys is a minute further. The Milton District Hospital is five minutes south, and the Milton Sports Centre is a similar distance. For outdoor activity, Coates Park is a five-minute drive, and Kelso Conservation Area is nine minutes north. Several elementary schools are within a ten-minute walk, including Irma Coulson Public School directly adjacent to the street.
The Milton GO Station is sixteen minutes by car, a distance that makes driving to the station the practical choice. Highway 401 is four minutes east via Regional Road 25, giving commuters a direct route to Mississauga and Toronto. The Milton Muslim Community Centre is four minutes west. The street itself has no commercial frontage; its amenity is proximity, not adjacency. Residents trade a quiet street for a short drive to most daily needs.
Beaty Trail trades rarely, with only a handful of recorded transactions over the past year. The three detached homes that have sold on the street leave little basis for a street-level price range, though the neighbourhood context provides meaningful framing. A single rental record on the street, a one-bedroom unit at around $1,500 per month, offers minimal lease data; rental activity remains sparse relative to sales volume. Days on market average around 85, a pace broadly consistent with the wider neighbourhood's 80-day typical, suggesting neither unusual acceleration nor extended holding periods.
The street's character is most clearly understood against the neighbourhood comparable: detached homes in the wider Beaty neighbourhood typically trade around $1.14M, having softened approximately 5.5% over the prior twelve months. This neighbourhood-level softening reflects broader market conditions in the area. With only one active listing currently on Beaty Trail itself, supply remains limited, and future trades will provide better visibility into whether the street's own pattern tracks with the neighbourhood's wider movement or diverges based on micro-location factors. The mix of family-oriented detached housing on the street aligns with the neighbourhood's character, where comparable homes form the broader competitive set for buyers considering the area.
Across the Beaty neighbourhood, comparable detached homes have moved through a measured market over the past year. The typical sold price for detached homes in the neighbourhood sits near $1.14M, based on a robust sample of 191 sales. This figure has softened modestly compared to the prior year, declining approximately 5.5%. Buyer-seller dynamics lean slightly in buyers' favour, with comparable homes selling just above asking price on average (around 100.3% of list), indicating competitive yet balanced conditions. Neighbourhood-wide pace for comparable detached homes runs at approximately 80 days on market, a tempo consistent with the broader Milton market. This context provides a useful reference point for understanding Beaty Trail's own position within the wider residential landscape, where detached housing anchors the local inventory and buyer preference.
Beaty Trail sits in the Beaty neighbourhood, a position that makes the 401 the primary artery for most commutes. The on-ramp at Regional Road 25 is a four-minute drive, putting Mississauga within 22 minutes and Pearson within 32. For those heading to downtown Toronto, the Milton GO station is a 16-minute drive; the combined trip runs around 64 minutes. The street itself is quiet, with through-traffic limited to residents, so the road network handles the load without the noise of a main corridor.
Public elementary catchment draws to Irma Coulson Public School, a one-minute drive from Beaty Trail. Robert Baldwin Public School and Sam Sherratt Public School are each five minutes away. Catholic elementary students attend Our Lady of Fatima Catholic Elementary School, a six-minute drive. For secondary, public students draw to schools in the Halton District School Board; Catholic students attend St. Francis Xavier Catholic Secondary School, also six minutes away. The concentration of schools within a short radius makes this a practical street for families with children at different stages.
Beaty Trail tends to suit families who want a detached home in a newer subdivision without paying the premium of the most established pockets. The street's three-bedroom detached homes, built in the early 2000s, appeal to buyers who value a consistent floor plan and a quiet cul-de-sac feel. The tradeoff is distance from the GO station: a 16-minute drive means the Toronto commute requires a car at both ends. Renters here are typically long-term anchored, with leases moving quickly when they do appear. For those who work in Mississauga or along the 401 corridor, the highway access offsets the station distance.
If you're considering alternatives in similar pockets, buyers who want a more established feel with mature trees might look to homes built in the 1990s rather than the early 2000s. For those who prioritize walkability to the GO station, the 16-minute drive to Milton GO is a fixed constraint on this street; streets closer to the station trade that convenience for a different price point. If a larger lot is the priority, some nearby pockets offer pie-shaped lots with deeper backyards, though the tradeoff is often tighter frontage. The key difference is not better or worse, but which compromise fits your daily rhythm.
Detached inventory on Beaty Trail has seen 3 closed sales recently. Details below.
Sale activity on Beaty Trail in the recent period. Stats reflect closed transactions only.
Rental activity on Beaty Trail across recent months. Breakdown by bed count below.
| Date | Address | Beds | Sold | vs Ask | DOM | Listing brokerage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Loading sold records⦠| ||||||
A thoughtful conversation grounded in every sale we have tracked on Beaty Trail.
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