Hood Terrace is a short, quiet residential lane in Milton's Coates neighbourhood.
Hood Terrace is a short, quiet residential lane in Milton's Coates neighbourhood. It runs between Ontario Street and Thompson Road, just north of Main Street East. The street sits in a mature pocket of the community, where older homes stand alongside newer infill construction. Coates Park is a two-minute walk away. The Milton GO Station is a six-minute drive. This is a street of modest scale and settled character, with little through traffic and a strong sense of enclosure.
Hood Terrace is lined with detached homes, all built in the mid-20th century. The housing stock consists primarily of two-storey and split-level designs, with brick and siding exteriors. Lot sizes are generous for the area, typically 50 feet wide by 100 feet deep. Homes here trade in the high-$1Ms to low-$2Ms, reflecting the street's established character and proximity to Milton's core.
The homes on Hood Terrace show a mix of original and updated condition. Some properties have been renovated with modern kitchens and bathrooms, while others retain their mid-century finishes. Roofs and windows vary by owner investment. The street's mature trees and deep front yards give it a leafy, established feel. Driveways are common, and most homes have attached garages. The overall impression is one of solid, unpretentious family housing.
Coates Park is a two-minute walk from Hood Terrace, offering a playground, sports fields, and walking paths. Milton District Hospital is a four-minute drive. The Milton GO Station is six minutes by car, with regular trains to Toronto Union Station. Highway 401 is accessible in four minutes via Regional Road 25, making commutes to Mississauga (22 minutes) and Oakville (24 minutes) manageable.
Grocery options include Walmart and FreshCo, both a four-minute drive. Sobeys is five minutes away. Several public and Catholic schools serve the area, including Milton District High School and Chris Hadfield Public School, each within a five-minute drive. The Milton Muslim Community Centre is four minutes away. For conservation and recreation, Kelso Conservation Area is a seven-minute drive.
Hood Terrace trades infrequently. Across the recent window the street has seen only a handful of transactions, with two detached sales and four lease registrations on file, so suitability and fit are discussed elsewhere on the page rather than read off a thin trade record. One active listing sits on Hood at present, which is consistent with the street's pattern of low turnover. Lease activity offers a clearer read than sale activity: a one-bedroom unit rented around $1,500, a three-bedroom around $3,500, and four-bedroom units around $3,700, suggesting family-scale tenancy carries the rental side of the street. With sale prices on Hood itself too sparse to anchor a yield calculation, the lease-to-sale read leans on the neighbourhood scope below for context.
Across Coates, comparable detached homes have moved through a fuller trade record than Hood itself supports. The typical detached sale settled around $1.2M, with the sold-to-ask ratio sitting just under 1.00, indicating buyers paying close to asking and modest negotiation room rather than meaningful discounting. Year-over-year, prices have eased back by roughly six percent, a softening that reads as a measured correction rather than a sharp reset. Days on market average around 89, a pace that points to deliberate decision-making on the buyer side, with homes neither lingering nor clearing in a rush. Against the four-bedroom lease band near $3,700 observed on Hood, a typical neighbourhood detached sale around $1.2M implies a gross yield in the high-3% range, a figure consistent with end-user ownership economics rather than investor-led demand. The sample at neighbourhood scope is deep enough to read with confidence, which makes it the more reliable anchor for prospective buyers weighing a Hood Terrace listing when the street's own record is too thin to stand alone.
Hood Terrace sits in Coates, a pocket of Milton that trades immediate highway access for a quieter residential rhythm. The 401 on-ramp at Regional Road 25 is a four-minute drive, making the Mississauga commute a straightforward 22-minute run and Pearson reachable in just over half an hour. For Toronto, the Milton GO station is six minutes away, and the total trip to Union runs just over an hour. The street itself is a terrace, so through-traffic is minimal; the road network handles the load without the noise that defines busier corridors.
Public elementary catchment draws to Chris Hadfield PS, Anne J. MacArthur PS, or Irma Coulson PS, each about a five-minute drive. Catholic elementary students attend Our Lady of Fatima or St. Scholastica, both roughly six minutes away. Secondary students have options: Milton District High School (public) and Bishop P.F. Reding or St. Francis Xavier (Catholic) are all within a five-minute drive. The concentration of schools within a short radius is a practical advantage for families with children at different stages.
Hood Terrace tends to suit buyers who prioritize a quiet, low-traffic setting over proximity to major arterials. The detached homes here appeal to families who want a yard and a garage without the premium of a larger lot. Renters on the street are typically long-term anchored: recent leases are unfurnished and move quickly, suggesting steady demand from tenants who plan to stay. The tradeoff is that you trade walkability to transit and shopping for a calmer daily environment. Buyers who value a short drive to the highway and a strong school catchment will find the balance works.
If you're considering alternatives in similar pockets, look at homes built in the early 2000s with larger lots if space is the priority. For buyers who want closer proximity to the GO station or more walkable amenities, newer subdivisions near the Milton GO station may be a better fit. Those seeking a more established neighbourhood with mature trees might explore the older sections of Coates, where lots tend to be deeper and the streets more tree-lined. Each option trades one set of advantages for another; the right fit depends on whether daily convenience or a quieter home base matters more.
Detached inventory on Hood Terrace 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 Hood Terrace.
No closed sales on record for Hood Terrace in the recent period.
Rental activity on Hood Terrace 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 Hood Terrace. Click through for the full listing detail and photos.
A thoughtful conversation grounded in every sale we have tracked on Hood Terrace.
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