Five field experiments, belonging to the Swedish long‐term soil fertility experimental project initiated in 1957, are situated in the very south of the country, two of them on land of favourable natural conditions and three on less favourable areas. The experimental design consists of all 16 combinations between four N and four PK treatments in two 4‐year crop rotations, with and without livestock. In the livestock rotation a clover/grass leg is cropped and cattle manure added once per rotation. One weakly (B1), one ordinary (C2), and one heavily (D3) fertilised NPK‐treatment in both crop rotations were examined in order to compare yields of less favourable with yields of favourable sites. The last five rotation sequences were used. In both rotations, D3 yields of the less favourable sites were superior to B1 yields of the favourable sites, except for winter wheat in the livestock rotation, for which the B1 yield at the favourable sites was superior. In contrast, D3 yields of the less favourable sites were generally lower than the C2 yields of the favourable sites except for clover/grass ley in the livestock rotation and oil seed rape in the rotation without livestock, for which the D3 and C2 yields were the same statistically.