Aurora detached homes · for sale

Detached Houses for Sale in Aurora, Ontario

Detached houses in Aurora span almost every price point, from compact starters in Aurora Heights through estate homes in Aurora Estates and Hills of St. Andrew. Below is what's currently active, plus what's worth knowing before you tour anything.

Detached homes in Aurora: the lay of the land

Aurora's detached market is segmented by pocket more than by anything else. Aurora Estates and Hills of St. Andrew anchor the luxury end with estate-tier properties on large lots. Aurora Grove, Bayview Wellington, and Bayview Northeast serve the family mid-market with three- and four-bedroom homes on traditional lots. Aurora Heights spans the broadest spread, with everything from compact older homes to fully renovated executive properties.

The right pocket depends on your priorities. Commute via GO favours pockets closer to the Aurora GO Station; commute via 404 favours the eastern pockets. School catchment matters everywhere but the specific schools vary block-by-block, I'll confirm for any address you're considering.

What to look at when buying detached in Aurora

Lot size and orientation. A south-facing backyard adds real living quality, and lot depth affects future renovation possibilities. Aurora has surprisingly variable lot dimensions even within the same subdivision, walk the property, don't just read the listing.

The three big-ticket items: roof age, furnace and HVAC age, electrical. Aurora's mid-pocket detached stock is now 20-40 years old in many neighbourhoods, which means some homes are approaching first-replacement on these systems. Inspection quality matters.

Basement: finished, partially finished, or development potential. Sets the home's long-term flexibility. Many Aurora basements have legal-second-unit potential, worth asking about specifically.

Buying detached in Aurora

The Aurora detached market is competitive in good pockets, Aurora Grove, Bayview Wellington, parts of Aurora Heights, but not reflexively so. Well-priced homes attract multiple offers; overpriced homes sit. We won't bid against ourselves and we won't overpay because of FOMO.

I won't book you eight houses in a weekend. Three or four homes I genuinely think could fit, walked carefully, with notes after each. We move when there's a real match.

Selling detached in Aurora

Pricing strategy is everything in Aurora's detached market. The well-priced home brings real offers from real buyers within two to four weeks. The overpriced home sits, accumulates days-on-market, and eventually sells for less than it would have at the correct list price from day one.

Pre-list prep typically pays for itself many times over: strategic painting, a careful staging plan, professional photography. I'll tell you specifically which dollars will earn back ten and which renovations a buyer won't pay extra for.

Common questions

About Aurora detached homes

What's the typical price range for detached homes in Aurora?

Entry-level detached starts in the high $900Ks in pockets like Aurora Heights. Mid-market family detached typically runs $1.2M-$1.8M across Aurora Grove, Bayview Wellington, Bayview Northeast. Estate-tier properties in Aurora Estates and Hills of St. Andrew clear $2.5M and run well into multi-millions.

Which Aurora neighbourhood has the most detached homes?

Aurora Grove and Bayview Wellington have the deepest mid-market detached inventory. Aurora Estates carries the luxury detached segment. Aurora Heights spans both. Each pocket has a different character, I can walk you through specifics.

How long do Aurora detached homes typically take to sell?

Well-priced, well-presented homes in good pockets typically move in two to four weeks. Overpriced or poorly presented homes can sit for months. Days-on-market is one of the most reliable signals, a listing past 60 days usually has a story behind it.

What should I watch for in an Aurora detached home inspection?

Roof age, furnace and HVAC age, electrical panel (some original panels may warrant updating), basement drainage and grading, and any signs of water intrusion. A thorough inspection from a qualified OAHI-member inspector surfaces all of this.

Are Aurora detached homes a good long-term investment?

Historically yes. The underlying drivers (school quality, GO Transit access, mature neighbourhoods, controlled growth) don't change quickly. Every individual property has its own story, though, happy to walk through specific numbers on any address you're considering.

Looking at Aurora detached homes?

Tell me what you're after.

Building preferences, must-haves, rough budget, send a quick note and I'll set up a personalized search. As soon as the right detached home comes on the market, you'll know.

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