Brampton North Homes for Sale
The city's settled north-central core — mature streets, real trees, and a short hop to the GO and downtown.
Brampton North is the TRREB district that fills the north-central slice of the city — broadly the settled ground above Williams Parkway, reaching up toward Vodden and Bovaird and leaning on Kennedy Road as its spine. It's one of the older parts of Brampton that isn't downtown: streets that were laid out and grown-in decades before the mega-subdivisions pushed the city's edges out to Mayfield and The Gore. The result is a district that reads mature — full tree canopy, sidewalks that have settled, and detached homes on lots that feel generous next to anything built after 2005.
This is move-up-in-place territory. The buyer here is often a family that already knows Brampton, wants a real detached house with a backyard on an established street, and would rather trade a brand-new kitchen for proximity to Chinguacousy Park, the Etobicoke Creek trail that threads the area, and a downtown that's genuinely close rather than a highway drive away. Housing stock runs the gamut — solid 1970s–90s detached, a layer of semis and freehold townhomes, and the odd renovated flip that shows what these bones can become.
The listings below are live — every active MLS match in Brampton North as it stands right now.
Why buyers search Brampton North
- Established detached streets with a real, grown-in tree canopy
- Minutes from Chinguacousy Park and the Etobicoke Creek trail corridor
- Genuinely close to Downtown Brampton, Brampton GO and the Rose Theatre
- Kennedy Road Züm BRT for a fast, frequent north–south run
- Older, larger lots than post-2005 Brampton subdivisions at a lower entry point
Active Brampton North listings
37 active MLS listings, $1.5M and up. Updated every 15 minutes.
Reading the north end, block by block
Brampton North isn't one texture — it shifts as you move up Kennedy. The southern reaches, closest to the downtown edge and Williams Parkway, carry the oldest housing and the most walkable feel: you can reach Brampton GO, Gage Park and the Four Corners without touching a highway, which is exactly what draws downtown-adjacent buyers who still want a driveway and a yard. The middle band around Vodden and Kennedy is classic established Brampton — long-owned detached homes, mature landscaping, and streets where turnover is slow enough that a freshly-renovated resale is often the exception rather than the rule.
Push toward the Bovaird and Heart Lake edges and the stock skews slightly newer and the lots stay comfortably sized, with quick access to Highway 410 for the airport and the 407 corridor. Wherever you land, the through-line is the same: this is a district you buy for location and bones, not for a builder's finishes — and for a lot of families that's precisely the trade they want to make.
Brampton North — frequently asked
What kind of homes sell in Brampton North?
Mostly established detached houses on mature streets, with a supporting layer of semis and freehold townhomes. The stock is largely 1970s through 1990s — older and more grown-in than the post-2005 subdivisions on Brampton's edges, which means larger lots and full tree canopy but a wider range of interior condition. You'll find both original-owner homes and tidy renovations on the same block. The live grid on this page is the honest picture of what's available today; run a specific address through our home valuation tool to see where it sits.
How is the commute from Brampton North?
It's one of the district's quiet strengths. Kennedy Road runs Züm BRT for a fast, frequent north–south trip, and Downtown Brampton with Brampton GO on the Kitchener line is close enough that the southern part of the district is a short drive or bus ride rather than a highway slog to reach the train. For drivers, Highway 410 is minutes away at the Bovaird and Heart Lake edges, feeding the 407 corridor and Pearson. That mix — rail, rapid bus and a nearby 410 ramp — is unusually flexible for an established Brampton neighbourhood.
Why do buyers pick Brampton North over a newer subdivision?
For the maturity and the location. A newer subdivision gives you contemporary finishes and a builder's floor plan; Brampton North gives you a larger, settled lot, a canopy of grown trees, and genuine proximity to Chinguacousy Park, the creek trails and downtown — things a fringe subdivision can't manufacture. Many buyers here are trading finishes for land and location, planning to renovate over time. If a fixer at a lower entry price and a real backyard beats a move-in-ready home on a compact new lot, this is your district.
How does Brampton North compare to Heart Lake?
They're neighbours in spirit and geography — both mature, north-central, family-oriented, and built on the trade of older stock for bigger lots. Heart Lake leans on its conservation area and its 1980s cul-de-sac character, while Brampton North sits closer to the downtown core and its GO-and-Züm access, with a slightly broader spread of housing eras and price points. Buyers who want the shortest reach to Downtown Brampton usually favour Brampton North; those chasing conservation-land-on-the-doorstep drift to Heart Lake.
What are the closing costs on a Brampton North purchase?
In Brampton you pay only the Ontario provincial land transfer tax — there's no separate municipal LTT the way Toronto charges one — and first-time buyers may qualify for a provincial rebate. The exact figure scales with your purchase price, so plug the number into our land transfer tax calculator for a precise estimate, and use the mortgage calculator to size your monthly carrying cost before you offer.
Nearby markets
Browse all Brampton — every neighbourhood in one search.
Mature north-central neighbour — conservation land and 1980s streets.
The heritage core just south — Brampton GO and Rose Theatre walkable.
The east-side family corridor — newer stock, Springdale locally.
Entry-level family neighbourhood out to the north-west.
Brampton's newer-build premium corner to the south-west.
Upscale established detached on larger lots — the move-up step.
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