Abstract Current challenges to global food security require sustainable intensification of agriculture through initiatives that include more efficient use of nitrogen (N), increased protein self‐sufficiency through homegrown crops, and reduced N losses to the environment. Such challenges were addressed in a continental‐scale field experiment conducted over 3 years, in which the amount of total nitrogen yield (N tot ) and the gain of N yield in mixtures as compared to grass monocultures (N gainmix ) was quantified from four‐species grass–legume stands with greatly varying legume proportions. Stands consisted of monocultures and mixtures of two N 2 ‐fixing legumes and two nonfixing grasses. The amount of N tot of mixtures was significantly greater ( P ≤ 0.05) than that of grass monocultures at the majority of evaluated sites in all 3 years. N tot and thus N gainmix increased with increasing legume proportion up to one‐third of legumes. With higher legume percentages, N tot and N gainmix did not continue to increase. Thus, across sites and years, mixtures with one‐third proportion of legumes attained ~95% of the maximum N tot acquired by any stand and had 57% higher N tot than grass monocultures. Realized legume proportion in stands and the relative N gain in mixture (N gainmix /N tot in mixture) were most severely impaired by minimum site temperature ( R = 0.70, P = 0.003 for legume proportion; R = 0.64, P = 0.010 for N gainmix /N tot in mixture). Nevertheless, the relative N gain in mixture was not correlated to site productivity ( P = 0.500), suggesting that, within climatic restrictions, balanced grass–legume mixtures can benefit from comparable relative gains in N yield across largely differing productivity levels. We conclude that the use of grass–legume mixtures can substantially contribute to resource‐efficient agricultural grassland systems over a wide range of productivity levels, implying important savings in N fertilizers and thus greenhouse gas emissions and a considerable potential for climate change mitigation.