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Mississauga real estate

Mississauga Homes for Sale

Canada's seventh-largest city — waterfront luxury, transit-served family suburbs, and the GTA's most diverse housing stock.

Mississauga is the quiet heavyweight of the GTA housing market. Population 750,000, sitting directly south of Brampton and west of Toronto proper, with a sixteen-kilometre Lake Ontario waterfront, a built-up downtown at Square One, and every stage of suburban development from 1950s bungalows in Lakeview to 2020s high-rises at the airport. If you're moving out of Toronto and into a real backyard, Mississauga is the first stop most families consider.

Inventory ranges as widely as the city itself. A 1-bed condo at Square One or the Airport Corporate Centre runs $550K–$700K. A family detached in Erin Mills or Meadowvale lands $1.2M–$1.6M. Lorne Park, Mineola, and the Port Credit executive streets see regular $2.5M–$5M trades, with landmark lakefront properties reaching $8M–$15M+. That's the honest spread — this page shows all of it.

The listings below are live MLS from the TRREB feed, refreshed every 15 minutes. Narrow by community using the filters, or dive into a specific neighbourhood page below for locally-written market context.

Active listings
2,432
Median list price
$740K
Mississauga median beds
3 bed

Why buyers search Mississauga

  • Lake Ontario waterfront (Port Credit to Clarkson, 16km of shoreline)
  • Pearson Airport + 407 + 403 + QEW — best highway geography in the 905
  • Lakeshore GO, Milton GO, and the Hurontario LRT under construction
  • University of Toronto Mississauga campus — Sheridan College in Brampton
  • Most diverse housing stock in the GTA — condos, semis, estates, waterfront

Active Mississauga listings

2,432 active MLS listings, $1.5M and up. Updated every 15 minutes.

Browse all Mississauga listings →

Which Mississauga community fits your brief?

Mississauga breaks into roughly six distinct housing markets. The lakefront corridor (Port Credit, Lorne Park, Clarkson, Lakeview) is the luxury-and-executive belt — prices pull up sharply as you move south of the QEW toward the water, with Lorne Park and Mineola sitting at the top. Central Mississauga (Square One / City Centre) is the condo-and-new-build core for young professionals and empty-nesters. Erin Mills and Meadowvale are the traditional family-suburban heartland — 40–50 ft lots, 1990s–2010s detached, strong schools. Streetsville is a village-character anomaly in the middle of the city, with 1800s main-street architecture and its own small-town feel. Cooksville is the most diverse pocket — a mix of walk-up apartments, 1960s detached, and growing new-build density. Meadowvale and Churchill Meadows on the north-west edge are the newest large-scale residential growth.

If you're moving out of Toronto, the honest question is: do you want waterfront premium (Port Credit / Lorne Park, $2M+) or suburban family value (Erin Mills / Meadowvale, $1.2M–$1.6M). Those are the two clearest tracks. The pages below for each sub-community go deeper — price bands, school catchments, commute patterns.

Mississauga — frequently asked

What's the average home price in Mississauga in 2026?

Mississauga-wide detached averages in spring 2026 are running ~$1.55M, with condos averaging around $720K and townhomes $900K. That citywide average hides huge variation — Erin Mills detached is typically $1.3M–$1.5M, Lorne Park detached is $2.5M–$4M+, Cooksville condos start around $550K. Use the community pages below for meaningful neighbourhood-specific numbers.

Is Mississauga a good place to buy in 2026?

Yes for most profiles. Dual-income families with $1.3M–$1.7M budgets can still find real detached in Erin Mills, Meadowvale, or northern Clarkson. Luxury buyers get waterfront access and mature-tree estate streets (Lorne Park, Mineola) at 20–30% below equivalent Oakville inventory. First-time condo buyers have strong transit-adjacent options at Square One and along the forthcoming Hurontario LRT corridor. The one place Mississauga struggles is first-time detached under $1M — that's Brampton or Pickering territory.

Which Mississauga community has the most luxury homes?

Lorne Park and Mineola are the undisputed luxury corners — large-lot executive detached, mature tree canopy, and walkability to the Port Credit village core. Port Credit itself has a mix of luxury detached, premium townhome product, and modernist infill reaching $5M+ on direct-lakefront lots. See the Lorne Park and Port Credit pages for specifics.

How's the Mississauga commute?

Unambiguously the best commute geography in the 905. Lakeshore West GO from Port Credit, Long Branch, or Clarkson stations puts Union Station 22–35 minutes away. Highway 401, 403, 407, and QEW all run through Mississauga. Pearson Airport is 15 minutes from anywhere in the city. The Hurontario LRT (under construction) will add rapid transit along the central Hurontario corridor by 2028.

Do I need a Mississauga-specific agent?

Mississauga has seven or eight quite distinct sub-markets — Port Credit doesn't trade like Meadowvale, and Lorne Park pricing looks nothing like Cooksville. A local agent who's walked the streets in your target community saves real money on pricing and negotiation. I work the city regularly and will be candid about when I think you should bring in a specialist for a specific niche.

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