Is Unionville a good place to live? Safety, parks and small-town character in Markham, June 2026
Unionville in Markham is described as one of York Region's most desirable communities as of June 2026, with low crime, abundant parks, and a preserved historic Main Street. Here is what the liveability picture looks like for families weighing a move north of Toronto.
People searching whether Unionville is a good place to live in Markham are usually weighing safety, green space, and everyday character against the cost of buying in. As of June 2026, the Casa Pronto desk's answer is a clear yes, and the reasons are specific.
What makes Unionville liveable now
According to the local Q&A desk, as of June 2026 Unionville in Markham is one of York Region's most desirable communities, known for its historic Main Street, top-ranked schools, low crime, and abundant parks. It blends small-town character with modern amenities, drawing families seeking space and quality schooling north of Toronto.
- Low crime, per the local desk's June 2026 assessment
- Abundant parks and green space
- A preserved, historic Main Street
- Small-town character paired with modern amenities
Each of those points carries weight on its own, but the desk's framing is that they combine. Low crime and abundant parks make a place feel safe to walk and let children play; the historic Main Street gives the community a recognisable centre; and modern amenities mean families do not have to trade convenience for character. That combination is what the desk means when it calls Unionville one of the region's most desirable communities.
How the historic core shapes daily life
The preserved Main Street is one of Unionville's defining features. The profile desk lists the historic Main Street as a headline characteristic of the community, alongside its top schools and balanced family housing market north of Toronto. A preserved main street is more than a postcard: it gives a neighbourhood a walkable focal point and a sense of place that purpose-built suburbs often lack.
That small-town character sits inside a larger, modern municipality. The desk describes Unionville as blending small-town character with modern amenities, which is the balance many families say they are looking for: the feel of a smaller community without giving up the services of a major suburb in York Region.
How safety and setting tie into who moves here
Safety is not a standalone selling point in the desk's reporting; it is woven into why families choose Unionville. The local Q&A desk notes that a safe, family-oriented setting, combined with strong academics and established catchments, makes the area a magnet for parents, which in turn underpins long-term housing demand.
That linkage matters for understanding the neighbourhood. When low crime and a family-oriented setting are part of what draws buyers, the people moving in tend to be families settling for the long term rather than short-term residents. The desk explicitly ties the safe setting to long-term housing demand, which suggests the liveability factors here are reinforcing rather than incidental.
What it means for families considering Unionville
For families weighing a move, the liveability picture described by the desk is consistent: low crime, abundant parks, a historic and walkable Main Street, and modern amenities, all inside Markham in York Region. This card describes those conditions as reported rather than offering advice on whether to buy.
The cost of that liveability is reflected in the housing market. The market desk reports a median sale price of approximately $1,450,000 as of June 2026, with a market that skews toward detached family homes on larger lots. The desirability factors and the price are connected: the desk notes that prices reflect strong school catchments and amenities. In short, the qualities that make Unionville liveable are also priced into what it costs to live there.
What to watch next
The liveability story here rests on the desk's June 2026 assessment of low crime, parks, and small-town character. Those are durable features, but the figures worth following are the same ones that signal whether demand is holding: the median price and the pace of sales. As long as families keep choosing Unionville for its safety and setting, the desk's framing of a desirable, family-oriented community is likely to hold.
Sources
- Casa Pronto local Q&A, is Unionville a good place to live (as of 2026-06)
- Casa Pronto neighbourhood profile, Unionville (as of 2026-06)
- Casa Pronto market desk, Unionville (as of 2026-06)