Mississauga · Ontario

Cooksville and Central Mississauga, Mapped by Verified Real Estate Specialists

Cooksville and central Mississauga sit at the city's crossroads, an older, exceptionally diverse area now transformed by the Hazel McCallion LRT running up Hurontario Street. Its housing mixes mid-century detached homes with a growing wave of condos. The clearest single gauge here is the MLS Home Price Index benchmark, which measures a typical home: TRREB data put Mississauga's benchmark at $890,700 in April 2026. A central location and new rapid transit support long-term value even as prices soften citywide. Because Cooksville's stock varies so widely block to block, local expertise matters, so we feature one verified professional per service.

Sector professionals

Real Estate Broker Asif Shahzad (CENTURY 21 Green Realty Inc., Brokerage) ★ 4.9 (128)
66 /100
Partial
Mortgage Broker AKAL Mortgages Inc. ★ 4.9 (417)
88 /100
Verified
Home Inspector Magnified Home Inspections Ltd (Joe Roberto, CMI, RHI) ★ 5 (15)
68 /100
Partial
Real Estate Lawyer Shaikh Law Firm ★ 4.8 (4)
58 /100
Partial
Certified Appraiser Frank Vrdoljak ★ 4.7 (23)
66 /100
Partial

Real estate market data

Mississauga's MLS Home Price Index benchmark, the value of a typical home, was $890,700 in April 2026, a useful all-types gauge for central Cooksville's mix of older houses and new condos along the Hurontario transit corridor.

Source : Toronto Regional Real Estate Board (TRREB), Mississauga MLS data, April 2026 (released early May 2026). https://trreb.ca/market-data/market-watch/

Expert guides by profession

Frequently asked questions

What does the MLS HPI benchmark tell me here?

It tracks the price of a typical home using a standardized model, so it isn't skewed when a few high-end or entry-level homes sell in a month. At $890,700 in April 2026, Mississauga's benchmark is the steadiest gauge for a mixed area like Cooksville. (TRREB, Mississauga MLS data, April 2026.)

How does the Hazel McCallion LRT affect Cooksville values?

The light rail line runs along Hurontario Street through central Mississauga, improving transit access and spurring condo development near stations. Better connectivity tends to support long-term values along the corridor, though effects vary by exact location and property type. (Metrolinx, Hazel McCallion Line.)

Why do prices vary so much across central Mississauga?

Cooksville mixes older detached homes, apartments and new condos within a few blocks, so the housing stock and buyers are highly varied. That diversity means a citywide average tells you little; street-level comparables matter far more here than in uniform subdivisions. (TRREB, Mississauga MLS data, April 2026.)