Stearn Place is a short cul-de-sac in Milton's Beaty neighbourhood, a quiet pocket of the city's north end.
Stearn Place is a short cul-de-sac in Milton's Beaty neighbourhood, a quiet pocket of the city's north end. The street sits east of Martin Street and south of Derry Road, framed by newer residential development and open green space. Its position places it within walking distance of several elementary schools and a short drive from the Milton District Hospital. The street itself is residential through and through, with no through traffic and a single point of entry. It is the kind of street where children walk to school and neighbours recognize one another by sight.
Stearn Place is lined with detached homes, all built in the early 2000s as part of the Beaty neighbourhood's expansion. The housing stock consists of two-storey, single-family residences on standard suburban lots. Lot widths typically measure between 36 and 40 feet, with depths ranging from 90 to 110 feet. Brick and siding exteriors dominate, with a mix of neutral tones and occasional stone accents. Driveways accommodate two cars, and most homes include a single-car garage.
Floor plans on Stearn Place tend toward four bedrooms and three bathrooms, with finished basements common among the older homes. The street shows consistent upkeep: roofs and windows appear well-maintained, and landscaping is tidy. A few properties have added interlocking stone walkways or upgraded front doors, but the overall character remains uniform. Across the Beaty neighbourhood, detached homes typically trade around $1.16M.
Daily errands are easily managed from Stearn Place. Grocery options include Walmart and FreshCo, both a four-minute drive south on Martin Street. Sobeys is five minutes away, and Canadian Superstore is seven. The Milton District Hospital is five minutes by car, a reassuring presence for families. For worship, the Milton Muslim Community Centre is four minutes away, and the Islamic Community Centre of Milton is eight.
Parks are within a short drive: Coates Park is five minutes away, and the larger Kelso Conservation Area is nine minutes. Centennial Park is walkable at ten minutes. Commuters have quick access to Highway 401 at Regional Road 25, four minutes from the street. The Milton GO Station is 16 minutes by car, with a 64-minute commute to downtown Toronto via GO and TTC. Mississauga is a 22-minute drive, Oakville 24, and Burlington 20.
Stearn Place trades rarely, with only a handful of recorded transactions over the past year. The street's thin transaction history means that suitability and pricing logic are clearest when read against the neighbourhood comparable, where detached homes across the broader Beaty neighbourhood have traded around $1.16M. A single detached home on Stearn Place moved through the market with days on market reaching 98, a pace that suggests measured buyer engagement typical of this price tier. The street itself hosts one active listing currently, indicating minimal immediate supply pressure. With so few trades to establish a local pattern, the neighbourhood context becomes the primary reference: comparable detached homes across Beaty have firmed modestly year-over-year, with sales clustering slightly below asking, a dynamic that reflects stable demand without aggressive competition. Rental activity on Stearn Place remains absent from the recent record, so lease-to-sale dynamics cannot be assessed at the street level. The scarcity of transactions here points toward a street where homes, once listed, tend to find buyers within a typical holding window, though the absolute frequency of sales is too low to predict with confidence.
Across Beaty, comparable detached homes have sold at around $1.16M over the recent window, reflecting a broader neighbourhood market in which comparable sales have eased back modestly year-over-year. The sample spans 192 transactions, providing a robust read on neighbourhood-level patterns. Buyers and sellers in the detached segment have remained closely aligned, with homes selling near asking, a dynamic that signals balanced conditions without forced discounting. Neighbourhood-wide pace runs slower than Stearn Place's own DOM, with comparable detached homes typically clearing in around 81 days, a difference that may reflect the street's positioning or the specificity of its current inventory relative to the wider detached market in Beaty. These broader neighbourhood conditions provide important context for understanding how Stearn Place's own sparse transaction record fits within its local market ecosystem.
Stearn Place sits in the Beaty neighbourhood, a position that makes the 401 the primary commute handle. The on-ramp at Regional Road 25 is a four-minute drive, putting Mississauga within 22 minutes and Pearson within 32. For downtown Toronto, the Milton GO station is a 16-minute drive; the combined trip runs just over an hour. The street itself is a quiet cul-de-sac, so the road network handles the load without through-traffic noise. Burlington and Oakville are each around 20 to 25 minutes by car, making the broader Halton region accessible from this pocket.
Public elementary catchment draws to Irma Coulson Public School, a one-minute drive from Stearn Place; Robert Baldwin and Sam Sherratt are each about five minutes away. Catholic elementary students attend Our Lady of Fatima Catholic Elementary, six minutes by car, or St. Scholastica at nine minutes. For secondary, the public catchment routes to Craig Kielburger Secondary School, while Catholic students draw to St. Francis Xavier Catholic Secondary, also six minutes. The concentration of schools within a short drive makes this a practical pocket for families with children at different stages.
Stearn Place tends to suit buyers who want a newer detached home in a quiet cul-de-sac without paying a premium for a high-profile address. The Beaty neighbourhood is established enough to have mature landscaping but recent enough that most homes were built in the 2000s. Families with school-aged children benefit from the proximity to multiple elementary options and the short drive to secondary catchments. The tradeoff is distance to the GO station: a 16-minute drive means the Toronto commute requires a car to the train. Buyers who work locally or in Mississauga will find the highway access more immediately useful.
If a shorter GO commute matters more, Martin Street offers a different balance: homes there trade around $310,000, reflecting a mix of housing types and closer proximity to the Milton GO station. For buyers who prefer a condo lifestyle with lower maintenance, Millside Drive shows condo trading around $525,000, which may suit those prioritizing walkability to amenities over a detached house. Both alternatives sit in similar pockets of Milton but shift the tradeoff between space, commute convenience, and price point.
Detached inventory on Stearn Place has seen 1 closed sales recently. Details below.
No closed sales on record for Stearn Place 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 Stearn Place.
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