Jean Landing is a short, quiet street in Milton's Ford neighbourhood.
Jean Landing is a short, quiet street in Milton's Ford neighbourhood. It sits in the northern reaches of the city, where development meets the escarpment landscape. The street is framed by newer subdivisions and open green space, with Ford District Park immediately adjacent. Its position offers a sense of separation from busier corridors while keeping essential routes within reach. The street's character is defined by its recent construction and the surrounding natural buffers.
Jean Landing is lined exclusively with townhomes, all built in the early 2020s. The units are arranged in traditional stacked or back-to-back configurations, typical of modern infill development in this part of Milton. Exteriors feature a mix of brick and siding in neutral tones, with attached garages and small front patios. The street's compact footprint means each home sits on a modest lot, maximizing density without sacrificing private outdoor space.
Inside, floor plans span three bedrooms across roughly 1,400 to 1,600 square feet. Open-concept main levels are standard, with kitchens opening to living and dining areas. Upstairs, primary bedrooms include ensuite bathrooms and walk-in closets. The finishes lean toward contemporary: quartz counters, laminate flooring, and stainless steel appliances. These are entry-level family homes, built for first-time buyers or downsizers looking for low-maintenance living. The street's uniform construction age gives it a consistent, cohesive look.
Ford District Park sits directly across from Jean Landing, offering a playground, sports fields, and walking trails. It is the street's primary outdoor amenity, easily reached on foot. For more extensive recreation, Rattlesnake Point Conservation and Kelso Conservation Area are a short drive north, providing hiking, rock climbing, and seasonal skiing. These escarpment parks define the area's character.
Daily errands require a drive. The nearest grocery stores, including Sobeys and Walmart, are about eight to nine minutes away by car. Milton District Hospital is eight minutes south. The Milton GO Station, ten minutes by car, connects commuters to Toronto in about 70 minutes via GO train and TTC. Highway 401 access at Regional Road 25 is nine minutes away, making Mississauga a 22-minute drive and Pearson Airport a 32-minute drive. Schools in the area include Craig Kielburger Secondary School and St. Scholastica Catholic Elementary School, both within a few minutes' drive.
Jean Landing trades rarely, with only a handful of recorded transactions over the recent period. The street consists primarily of townhouse units, a housing form that appeals to downsizers, young families, and investors seeking rental income with modest capital deployment. The neighbourhood character around Ford District Park leans toward moderate-density residential development, with older established schools and conservation areas within reasonable reach. When townhouses do change hands on Jean Landing, activity is deliberate rather than frenetic; the street does not generate the constant turnover of larger developments. Buyers drawn to this location typically value proximity to Ford District Park, walkable access to neighbourhood amenities, and the stability of an established community over the novelty of newer construction elsewhere.
Days on market average around 93 days, a pace consistent with the broader townhouse market in the Ford neighbourhood. The street currently shows one active listing. Rental activity on Jean Landing skews toward three-bedroom units, with typical rents settling around $3,150 per month, a figure that positions the street competitively within the townhouse rental segment. For context, comparable townhouse properties across the Ford neighbourhood typically trade around $856,000, with that figure remaining relatively stable year-over-year. The modest lease volume alongside low sales count means the street functions primarily as a stable residential address rather than as a speculative or conversion-intensive market. Suitability here is discussed elsewhere on the page; the thinness of the trade record means each transaction reflects the specific terms and timing of individual sellers and buyers rather than revealing a robust market pattern.
Across the Ford neighbourhood, comparable townhouse homes typically trade around $856,000. This figure is drawn from a substantial sample spanning recent quarters, and the typical price has held steady year-over-year, with only minimal fluctuation. Buyer-seller balance in the neighbourhood leans modestly toward buyers; homes are selling to ask at approximately 98 cents on the dollar, indicating light negotiation room but broadly aligned expectations. Days on market in the broader neighbourhood average around 93 days, matching the pace observed on Jean Landing itself. This alignment suggests that townhouse velocity and pricing discipline in the Ford area operate at a consistent rhythm, with no material divergence between the street and its immediate surrounding context.
Jean Landing sits in Milton's Ford neighbourhood, a position that makes the GO line the realistic Toronto commute. A ten-minute drive to Milton GO Station puts Union under seventy minutes total, door to platform. For those working in Mississauga, the drive runs around twenty-two minutes via Regional Road 25; the 401 ramp at that same junction is nine minutes from the street. The street itself is quiet, a cul-de-sac off a local road, so the daily rhythm is one of deliberate departure rather than constant traffic noise.
Public elementary catchment draws to E.W. Foster Public School, a six-minute drive, with W.I. Dick Middle School at the same distance for the intermediate years. Catholic elementary students attend St. Scholastica Catholic Elementary, four minutes away and walkable from the southern end of the street. Secondary students route to Craig Kielburger Secondary School for the public board or St. Francis Xavier Catholic Secondary School for the Catholic board, both within a seven-minute drive. The mix of nearby elementary options suits families who want choice within a short radius.
Jean Landing tends to suit buyers who want a newer townhouse in a quiet pocket of Ford without paying detached prices. The street's townhomes, built in the 2010s, appeal to first-time buyers and young families who prioritize a low-maintenance property and proximity to parks. Ford District Park is steps away, a practical advantage for households with young children. The tradeoff is distance to daily errands: grocery stores and the hospital are eight to nine minutes by car, and the GO station is ten minutes away. Buyers here accept a car-dependent routine in exchange for a quieter street and a lower entry point than the detached homes on neighbouring Wettlaufer or Apple.
If a detached home with more space is the priority, Wettlaufer Terrace trades around $1.8M and offers a different lot and floor plan dynamic. For a wider mix of housing types including semis and larger townhomes, Apple Terrace sits in a similar price band around $1.6M. Both streets are within the same Ford neighbourhood, so the commute and school catchments remain familiar. The difference is in the stock itself: Wettlaufer and Apple skew toward buyers who want more square footage or a different ownership structure, while Jean Landing keeps the entry point lower.
Townhouse inventory on Jean Landing has seen 1 closed sales recently. Details below.
Sale activity on Jean Landing in the recent period. Stats reflect closed transactions only.
Rental activity on Jean Landing 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 Jean Landing.
Request a valuation βPrivate access to new and upcoming listings before they go public.
Set an alert