Port Credit Homes for Sale
Mississauga's waterfront village — Lakeshore main street, the marina, and Lake Ontario at the end of the block.
Port Credit is the one corner of Mississauga that feels like a small town. A walkable main street along Lakeshore Road, a working marina at the mouth of the Credit River, three GO trains per hour at Port Credit station, and a housing stock that mixes 1930s waterfront cottages, 1970s executive detached, and a steady wave of post-2010 luxury infill. Half the weekends here are festivals — Waterfront Festival, Busker Fest, the Christmas Market — and the other half are people walking the lakefront trail with coffee.
Typical Port Credit detached at the $1.5M+ tier starts around $1.6M–$2M for older streets a few blocks off the water, climbs to $2.5M–$4M for renovated 2010s+ infill on 40–50 ft lots, and reaches $5M–$10M+ for direct-lakefront properties when they come up (which is rarely — most are held long-term). Premium newer townhome product along Lakeshore East can be found $1.5M–$2.2M for buyers who want the village lifestyle without the estate-home maintenance.
Listings below are every active Port Credit MLS match at the $1.5M+ tier right now, pulled live from the TRREB feed.
Why buyers search Port Credit
- Walk to Lake Ontario — pier, marina, waterfront trail
- Port Credit GO — 22 minutes to Union Station
- Village main street: restaurants, bakeries, craft coffee, jazz
- Port Credit Arena, community sailing club, tennis
- Easy QEW + 403 access for north/west-bound commutes
Active Port Credit listings
51 active MLS listings, $1.5M and up. Updated every 15 minutes.
What to know before you shop Port Credit
Two things catch first-time Port Credit buyers off guard. First, lot depth varies dramatically — the 50 ft lot depths south of Lakeshore are deep enough to carry a family home plus a backyard; the 100+ ft lots north of Lakeshore give you room for a pool and a proper garden. Second, condition varies widely too. A lot of the 1970s housing stock is still original and sells well under renovated-equivalent pricing — which is either the opportunity of the neighbourhood or a budget black hole depending on how you feel about renovations.
Most Port Credit buyers fall into two camps: downsizing empty-nesters moving out of Mississauga's interior or Oakville (they want the walkability and the commute), and younger families priced out of Toronto beaches-and-south-end detached (they want the Lake Ontario lifestyle at 30% of the price of equivalent Beaches inventory).
Port Credit — frequently asked
How much does a home in Port Credit cost?
Entry-level detached in Port Credit at the $1.5M+ tier sits around $1.6M–$2M — typically a 1970s 3-bed on a 40 ft lot a couple streets off the water. Renovated inventory or newer 2010s+ infill runs $2.5M–$4M. Direct-lakefront lots, when they come available, trade $5M–$10M+; landmark properties have cleared $15M in the past two years. Premium newer townhome product along Lakeshore East runs $1.5M–$2.2M.
What's the commute from Port Credit?
Port Credit GO station serves the Lakeshore West line — Union Station in 22 minutes off-peak, every 15 min at rush. By car, downtown Toronto is 30–40 minutes off-peak via the QEW and Gardiner. Pearson Airport is 20 minutes north via the 427. If you want GO-train rail access as a primary commute option, Port Credit is one of the best-positioned neighbourhoods in the entire GTA.
Are Port Credit schools good?
Above-average for Peel Region. Public elementary options include Kenollie PS and Riverside PS. Port Credit Secondary School (English public) is the catchment high school and is consistently well-reviewed. Catholic elementary and secondary are both represented. French immersion is available at several Peel DSB elementaries in the area.
Is Port Credit lakefront property worth it?
Depends on your priorities. Direct-lakefront lots trade at a 100–150% premium vs streets two blocks back. The premium buys you the view, private shoreline, and a legitimate "waterfront" designation for resale marketing. The trade-offs: flood and shoreline erosion risk (always get a shoreline engineer involved), higher insurance, and extreme price segmentation on sale timing — lakefront properties in Port Credit can sit 90–180 days even in a hot market because the buyer pool is small. For multi-decade holds, lakefront is historically the best-performing Port Credit segment. For shorter holds, be careful.
How does Port Credit compare to Oakville?
Similar character — walkable waterfront village, executive housing stock, strong commute. Different pricing. Port Credit typically trades 20–30% below equivalent Oakville detached for the same square footage, and the Mississauga municipal tax base is lower. Oakville has better access to 403-east employment; Port Credit has faster downtown Toronto commute via GO. For buyers torn between the two, the question usually comes down to where you work: if your job is downtown Toronto, Port Credit's the easier commute.
Communities in Port Credit
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