A long-term soil tillage experiment was conducted in 2005 to 2008 on a Ramann-type brown forest soil (Eutric Cambisol) in Keszthely, Hungary, with different cultivation methods (no-till, drill, disc tillage, conventional tillage (ploughing)) and five increasing N doses. Treatment A was the cultivation method: conventional tillage (ploughing), no-till, drill, disc tillage; and Treatment B was N fertilizer application: N 0-N 4 (0, 120, 180, 240 and 300 for maize, and 0, 120, 160, 200 and 240 kg/ha per ton for wheat, respectively). Both plots received a blanket application of 100 kg P 2O 5/ha and 100 kg K 2O/ha. With soil cultivation and N fertilization treatments, winter wheat yield varied between 2.5 and 6.0, while maize yield ranged from 6 to 10 t/ha. The influence of the annual circumstances (mostly rainfall) on the yields was measurable and from time to time statistically significant. The different amounts of N fertilizer significantly increased the yields of maize and wheat. The highest increases were found in the case of N 1 and N 2 treatments. The maximum yields of maize and wheat were obtained with the 200-250 kg N/ha doses. On the average of years, the largest weed cover (28%) was recorded in the no-tillage treatment, while the ploughing system was the least weedy (10-15%).