Public secondary · Grade 9–12 · SD43 · Verified boundary · Live MLS® · Buyer-side read
The Gleneagle Secondary catchment is one of the most-searched school boundaries in Coquitlam. This page covers what homes actually look like inside the boundary, the current price band and time-on-market, how the boundaries work, and what to verify before you write an offer.
Quick answers
What homes are in the Gleneagle catchment?
Mostly new-build detached homes (2015 onward), strata and freehold townhomes (Hockaday, Partington Creek, The Ridge, Smiling Creek), and a growing pocket of presale assignments. Condos exist but inventory is limited.
How much do Gleneagle catchment homes cost in 2026?
Entry detached typically $1.45M–$1.7M; mid-band $1.7M–$2.1M; executive new-builds $2.1M–$2.5M+. Freehold townhomes run $1.05M–$1.4M.
Is Gleneagle a strong school?
Yes — and trending up. AP options in select subjects, strong arts and athletics, and a leadership program that’s well-regarded. Newer school, growing reputation as Burke Mountain’s family cohort matures into secondary years.
Will the Gleneagle catchment change?
Almost certainly. Burke Mountain has the largest elementary cohort in SD43, and the district is actively expanding capacity. Expect incremental boundary adjustments over the next 3–5 years.
Burke Mountain or Westwood Plateau for a family?
Burke if you want new construction, more inventory, and a younger family demographic. Plateau if you want established streets, mature trees, and the higher school-driven premium of the Charles Best catchment.
The Gleneagle catchment covers most of Burke Mountain — the largest new-build neighbourhood in the Tri-Cities. Inside the boundary you’ll find new-construction detached (2015 onward), freehold and strata townhomes (Hockaday, Partington Creek, The Ridge, Smiling Creek), and a growing pocket of presale assignments. Condos exist but are limited.
Burke Mountain pricing is more accessible than the Westwood Plateau or Heritage Mountain alternatives — entry detached typically $1.45M–$1.7M, mid-band $1.7M–$2.1M, and full executive new-builds $2.1M–$2.5M+. Resale townhomes in the freehold complexes range $1.05M–$1.4M. The catchment is the closest thing in the Tri-Cities to a true family suburb.
Gleneagle is the secondary serving Burke Mountain’s growth. It’s a newer school — the campus and facilities show it — and its academic reputation has been climbing steadily as the Burke Mountain family demographic matures into secondary years. AP options exist in select subjects; athletics and arts programs are well-funded; the leadership program is strong.
The practical reality: Gleneagle is growing. Burke Mountain’s elementary cohort is the largest in the district, and SD43 is actively expanding capacity to absorb it. Expect incremental boundary adjustments and new feeder pattern announcements over the next 3–5 years. Stay close to the SD43 long-range plan if school stability matters to your purchase.
Burke Mountain is where most of my Coquitlam first-move-up families end up. The catchment is large, inventory is more reliable than the established neighbourhoods, and the new-build premium tends to soften 12–24 months after possession as the “builder finish” loses its sheen. That means resale value on a 5-year-old Burke Mountain detached is usually better than a brand-new one — counter-intuitive, but I see it confirmed in the data every quarter.
Two warnings. First, Burke Mountain catchments shift more than any other in the district — rapid growth forces SD43 to redraw boundaries. Verify your address before writing, and don’t assume permanence. Second, builder quality varies street by street. Drainage issues on the south-facing slopes, poly-B plumbing in some older lots, and inconsistent finish from secondary builders are all things I check before recommending a specific home.
Dominant property type, build vintage, and lot pattern — the four things buyers ask before booking a tour.
2015 onward detached construction across most of the catchment. Significant presale pipeline continues.
Strong — Hockaday, Partington Creek, The Ridge, Smiling Creek complexes. Freehold options exist.
Smaller lots than Westwood Plateau (4,000–6,000 sq ft typical). Some upper streets have 7,000+ sq ft.
Most reliable inventory of any premium SD43 catchment. Right home comes up monthly, not yearly.
Programs, reputation, and the practical realities families talk about at the school gate.
Select subjects — not as deep as Charles Best or Heritage Woods, but expanding.
Strong music, drama, visual arts. Newer facilities support the work.
Competitive across major sports; strong basketball and soccer programs.
School is expanding capacity. Cohort sizes growing as Burke Mountain matures.
| Type | Public secondary (Grade 9–12) |
|---|---|
| District | SD43 |
| Location | Burke Mountain, Coquitlam |
| Programs | AP (select subjects), arts, athletics, leadership, core academics |
| Feeders in | Scott Creek Middle, Pinetree Way Middle |
| Official site | www.sd43.bc.ca |
Catchment lines can run mid-block — two houses on the same street can feed different schools. Always verify the specific address with SD43’s catchment tool before you write, or ask me to pull it.
Most of Burke Mountain, including Partington Creek and the upper streets.
Most-changed catchment in SD43 — Burke Mountain growth forces periodic redraws.
SD43 catchment tool. Pull a fresh copy for every address — do not trust 2-year-old data.
SD43 is expanding Gleneagle’s capacity. Future boundary adjustments are likely as new elementaries open.
Five moves — in order — that turn a catchment search into a closed deal without the typical false starts.
Burke Mountain catchments shift more than any other in SD43. Read the district’s current capital plan before you choose a street, so you understand what could move.
Drainage on south-facing slopes, poly-B plumbing in some older lots, and inconsistent finish from secondary builders are all things I check. Builder reputation matters here.
New-build premium softens 12–24 months after possession. A 5-year-old detached in this catchment often shows better resale than a brand-new one nearby.
Two houses on the same Burke Mountain street can sit in different catchments after a boundary redraw. Don’t assume.
Burke Mountain’s school traffic and street parking pattern is the real daily experience. Sundays don’t show it.
Four things I tell every family chasing a specific catchment — learned the hard way over years of these searches.
Listing descriptions are wrong often enough to matter. Pull SD43’s catchment map for the specific house, every time.
Morning rush traffic and parking around the school is the real test of the neighbourhood, not the Sunday open house.
If one child is enrolled, siblings usually get priority — but it’s a soft rule, not a guarantee. Call the school directly.
Catchment-chasing is a multi-year hold, not a flip. Budget the home around the K–12 pathway, not this year’s grade.
Live MLS® inventory in the Burke Mountain area. The list isn’t boundary-verified — always confirm the specific address against the SD43 catchment map before writing.
Open House
Open House
Open House Most families think in K–12 pathways, not single schools. These are the catchments and neighbourhood pages that usually pair with this one.
Does every Burke Mountain address feed Gleneagle?
Most do, but boundary changes happen regularly here. Verify the specific address with SD43 — do not rely on listing descriptions or older catchment maps.
Is Gleneagle academically competitive with Charles Best?
It’s closing the gap. AP options are narrower than Best, but academic outcomes have been trending up as the Burke Mountain family demographic matures. For families prioritising new construction over the deepest AP program, Gleneagle is the right trade.
Will my child attend Gleneagle the whole 5 years?
In-catchment students who start at Gleneagle continue there even if the boundary redraws after enrolment. New buyers writing offers today should still verify the current line, since future catchment changes affect resale value.
What’s the best Burke Mountain street for the catchment?
Streets vary by drainage, sun exposure, traffic, and proximity to elementary feeders. Generally Soball, Dawes Hill, and the upper Partington Creek streets carry the strongest combination. Always tour 8 AM weekday morning, not Sunday open house.
Are townhomes inside the Gleneagle catchment a good buy for families?
Yes — the freehold townhomes in Hockaday, Partington Creek, and The Ridge complexes hold value well and feed the same Gleneagle pathway. They’re the right entry point for families who want the catchment without the full detached price.
I’ll pull verified listings inside the Gleneagle boundary and walk them with you — schools, traffic, the house itself.
Book a TourAlready own in Coquitlam? Find out what your home is worth today — based on current MLS sold data for your block.
Free Home ValuationDirect line for catchment questions, boundary verification, and homes available inside Gleneagle Secondary — no team handoffs.
Contact SebastianSebastian Czarkowski | REALTOR® | Royal LePage Elite West | Coquitlam, BC. Catchment boundaries are set and reviewed by School District 43 (Coquitlam) and are subject to change. Always verify the catchment for a specific address using the official SD43 catchment tool or by contacting the school directly. School descriptors reflect publicly available SD43 data, Fraser Institute rankings, and local working knowledge — they are not formal academic rankings. MLS® listings are sourced from Greater Vancouver REALTORS®. This page is informational and does not constitute a real estate or educational advisory.