Cusick Circle is a quiet residential cul-de-sac in Milton's Harrison neighbourhood, a short drive north of Derry Road and west of Ontario Street.
Cusick Circle is a quiet residential cul-de-sac in Milton's Harrison neighbourhood, a short drive north of Derry Road and west of Ontario Street. The street forms a compact loop with no through traffic, giving it a private, family-oriented character. Mature trees line the sidewalks, and homes sit on generous lots with deep front yards. The surrounding area is predominantly residential, with parks and schools within a few minutes' drive. Cusick offers a sense of enclosure rare in newer subdivisions, a pocket of calm set apart from the main arteries.
Cusick Circle is lined with detached homes built in the early 2000s, part of the Harrison community's development wave. The stock consists of two-storey family homes with brick-and-vinyl exteriors, typically offering three to four bedrooms and two-car garages. Lot sizes are generous for the area, with wide frontages and deep backyards. The street's cul-de-sac layout means homes face inward, creating a cohesive streetscape with consistent setbacks.
Inside, floor plans follow the era's conventions: main-floor family rooms, eat-in kitchens, and formal living or dining spaces. Many homes have been updated with hardwood flooring, renovated kitchens, and finished basements. Exterior treatments vary slightly, with some homes featuring stone accents or covered front porches. The overall condition is well-maintained, reflecting owner-occupancy and pride of ownership. Across the Harrison neighbourhood, detached homes typically trade around $1.1M.
Cusick Circle sits within a five-minute drive of several parks, including Escarpment View Park and Velodrome Park, both offering playgrounds, sports fields, and walking trails. Centennial Park and Milton Community Park are also close, providing additional green space and recreational facilities. Daily errands are handled at FreshCo Milton or Walmart Milton, each about six to seven minutes away by car.
The area is well served by schools: Chris Hadfield Public School and Irma Coulson Public School are within five minutes' drive, while Elsie MacGill Secondary School is six minutes away. Milton District Hospital is seven minutes south, and the Milton GO Station offers a 67-minute commute to downtown Toronto via train. Highway 401 access at Regional Road 25 is also seven minutes away, connecting to Mississauga in 22 minutes and Oakville in 24.
Cusick Circle trades rarely. The street has recorded only two sales in the recent window, both detached homes, making quantitative pattern analysis limited. With just one active listing currently on the market and a recorded days-on-market figure near 93 days, the street suggests a measured pace where homes remain listed for roughly three months before moving. The circle sits within the Harrison neighbourhood, where comparable detached homes have typically sold around $1.1M over the past year, anchoring broader context for any property that surfaces here. No lease activity has been recorded, so rental comps are unavailable to establish yield expectations.
Across the Harrison neighbourhood, comparable detached homes have typically sold around $1.1M. The neighbourhood sample is robust (139 recent sales), providing solid grounding for this figure. Year-over-year, comparable detached values have softened modestly, with prices moving down approximately 12 percent from the prior year period, signalling some easing in the upper-detached segment. Buyer activity relative to asking price sits near 98.5 percent, indicating homes are selling very close to list price, a sign of stable buyer-seller balance without aggressive discounting.
Cusick Circle sits in the Harrison neighbourhood, a position that makes the Milton GO station a seven-minute drive. The 401 ramp at Regional Road 25 is roughly the same distance, giving drivers a direct line to Mississauga in about 22 minutes and to downtown Toronto in just over an hour via GO. For Pearson, the drive runs around 32 minutes. The street itself is a quiet circle with no through traffic, so the road network handles the load without the noise of a busier corridor.
Public elementary catchment draws to Chris Hadfield PS or Irma Coulson PS, both about a five-minute drive from Cusick Circle. Catholic elementary students attend Guardian Angels Catholic ES, also a short drive. For secondary, public students head to Elsie MacGill Secondary School (six minutes), while Catholic students have Bishop P.F. Reding Catholic SS within seven minutes. The proximity to multiple schools at each level gives families options without long commutes.
Cusick Circle tends to suit families who want a detached home in a quiet cul-de-sac setting, with schools and parks within a short drive. The street's low turnover and limited inventory mean buyers here are typically looking to settle in for a while. The tradeoff is that daily errands require a car; the nearest grocery is a six-minute drive, and the GO station is not walkable. For households that value a calm, established pocket over walkability, Cusick Circle offers a straightforward fit.
If you're considering alternatives in similar pockets, homes on Martin trade around $310K, which reflects a different price tier and typically older stock. For those seeking condo living with lower maintenance, Millside offers units around $525K. Both are within the same general area but serve different household shapes and budgets. The choice comes down to whether you prioritize a detached home on a quiet circle or a more compact, lower-maintenance option.
Detached inventory on Cusick Circle has seen 2 closed sales recently. Details below.
No closed sales on record for Cusick Circle in the recent period.
| Date | Address | Beds | Sold | vs Ask | DOM | Listing brokerage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Loading sold records⦠| ||||||
A thoughtful conversation grounded in every sale we have tracked on Cusick Circle.
Request a valuation β