Wondering if Millcroft still delivers the golf-community lifestyle buyers picture when they start browsing Burlington homes? You are not alone. If you are considering a move into this established north Burlington neighbourhood, it is important to understand what has stayed the same, what is changing, and what that means for your budget, lot selection, and long-term value. Let’s dive in.
Millcroft was approved in 1985 as a prestige residential community built around a privately operated golf course, across roughly 380 hectares between Walkers Line, Appleby Line, Upper Middle Road, and Dundas Street. The original vision centered on single-family homes, with some medium-density housing included as part of the overall mix, according to the City of Burlington planning record.
That origin story still matters today. When you buy in Millcroft, you are often buying into an established streetscape, a lower-density feel, and housing stock that tends to appeal to both move-up buyers and downsizers who want more space or a more polished neighbourhood setting.
Millcroft is still closely tied to its golf identity, but buyers should not assume that every home offers permanent open views or unchanged surroundings. The City of Burlington’s Millcroft Greens project page states that related applications were approved by the Ontario Land Tribunal in February and March 2025, and city updates in March 2026 note site-preparation work and tree removals beginning in late March 2026.
In practical terms, that means a “backs onto golf” or “backs onto open space” feature needs closer review than it once did. If you are shopping here, the value of a specific lot now depends even more on current site conditions, backing orientation, privacy, and how nearby redevelopment may affect the property over time.
Although detached homes remain the core housing type, Millcroft is not a one-product neighbourhood. Based on the city planning record and recent listings, you can find:
That variety can be a plus if you want flexibility in budget or maintenance level. It also means you should compare properties carefully, because two homes in Millcroft can have very different ownership structures and monthly costs.
One of the biggest buying mistakes in Millcroft is assuming all townhomes or attached homes carry the same obligations. They do not.
Recent listing examples show a wide range. A freehold attached home at 2967 Jackson Drive was asking $918,000, while a condo townhome at 246-2075 Walkers Line was asking $630,000 with monthly maintenance fees of $455.79. A newer Millcroft Towns unit at 1-2273 Turnberry Road was asking $1.599M with monthly maintenance of $321.43, and a townhome at 14-4165 Upper Middle Road sold for $925,000 with a $216 monthly fee, according to recent listing snapshots.
If you are comparing homes here, confirm whether the property is:
Then ask exactly what any monthly fee covers. Landscaping, snow removal, exterior maintenance, and shared elements can all affect the real monthly cost of ownership.
Your monthly carrying costs in Millcroft will go beyond mortgage payments. Burlington’s 2026 budget materials estimate total residential property taxes at $1,015.26 per $100,000 of current value assessment, up 4.49% from 2025, based on the city’s 2026 budget summary.
That figure is city-wide, not specific to Millcroft, but it gives you a helpful planning tool. If you are purchasing at a higher price point, it is wise to model taxes, utilities, insurance, and any maintenance fees together before deciding what feels comfortable.
Millcroft is generally viewed as one of Burlington’s more premium established neighbourhoods, but not necessarily the city’s top-priced pocket. That makes it appealing for buyers who want a more upscale feel without entering the highest-priced lakefront or heritage segments.
Official January 2026 Burlington statistics show a median single-family price of $1.16M and a median townhouse or condo price of $676,000. Average sales prices were $1.299M for single-family homes and $756,000 for townhouse and condo properties, according to Cornerstone’s January 2026 report.
A separate March 2026 neighborhood snapshot from Ovlix’s Burlington market page placed Millcroft in Burlington’s upper price tier, though that should be treated as directional rather than definitive. Even so, it supports the broader view that Millcroft competes above many mid-market Burlington neighbourhoods.
The current market backdrop gives buyers more room to evaluate options than they had during the peak-pandemic years. That does not mean every seller is negotiable, but it does mean due diligence matters.
Cornerstone’s February 2026 update put Burlington’s HPI benchmark at $890,300, up 4.3% month over month but still 8.0% below the prior year. The same update reported a broader market supply of 3.2 months and average days on market of 47, according to the February 2026 Cornerstone market update.
CREA’s Burlington update also described a more buyer-friendly environment, noting that active listings were well above the five-year average and months of inventory were also meaningfully higher than the five-year norm, based on CREA’s Burlington report. For you, that means there may be more opportunity to compare lot quality, fee structure, and future surroundings instead of rushing based on the neighbourhood name alone.
If you are buying near the golf course, golf-course adjacency deserves real attention. Millcroft Golf Club’s rules state that golfers should call out “FORE” for errant shots and that golfers are responsible for damage to homes or property. The city planning record also notes that adjacent purchasers were to receive title notice about possible nuisance from golf-course activity.
That means you should ask pointed questions before you submit an offer. Focus on the property’s actual exposure, not just the listing photos.
These details can influence both enjoyment and future maintenance costs.
Millcroft Golf Club still describes itself as semi-private, with members and public golfers welcome. At the same time, its 2026 information notes temporary operating changes, including a 9-hole setup for the 2026 season and a closed dining room and banquet space during that season, according to the Millcroft Golf Club website.
For buyers, that is another reminder that the neighbourhood’s golf identity is evolving. If club access, course activity, or surrounding ambiance are part of your buying decision, review current conditions instead of relying on older assumptions.
In today’s market, Millcroft’s long-term appeal likely comes less from the golf label alone and more from specific property features. Based on the planning history, current inventory mix, and changing site conditions, buyers should pay closest attention to:
In other words, the best opportunities in Millcroft are often the homes that combine established neighbourhood character with practical value drivers. A well-positioned detached home on a private lot may compete very differently from a fee-bearing townhome, even if both share the same postal area.
If you are serious about Millcroft, go in with a property-by-property mindset. The neighbourhood still has strong appeal, but the details matter more than ever.
A smart buying plan usually includes:
That approach helps you separate true value from outdated assumptions.
If you are weighing a move into Millcroft, working with an advisor who understands Burlington’s neighbourhood-by-neighbourhood pricing, product mix, and local market shifts can make the process much clearer. For tailored guidance on Millcroft and the broader Burlington market, connect with Robertson Kadwell.
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