Rural development policies in many Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) member
countries promote sustainable landscape management with the intention of providing multiple ecosystem services
(ES). Yet, it remains unclear which ES benefits are perceived in different landscapes and by different
people. We present an assessment of ES benefits perceived and mapped by residents (n=2,301) across 13
multifunctional (deep rural to peri-urban) landscapes in Europe. We identify the most intensively perceived ES
benefits, their spatial patterns, and the respondent and landscape characteristics that determine ES benefit
perception. We find outdoor recreation, aesthetic values and social interactions are the key ES benefits at local
scales. Settlement areas are ES benefit hotspots but many benefits are also related to forests, waters and mosaic
landscapes. We find some ES benefits (e.g. culture and heritage values) are spatially clustered, while many others
(e.g. aesthetic values) are dispersed. ES benefit perception is linked to people’s relationship with and accessibility
to a landscape. Our study discusses how a local perspective can contribute to the development of contextualized
and socially acceptable policies for sustainable ES management. We also address conceptual confusion
in ES framework and present argumentation regarding the links from services to benefits, and from
benefits to different types of values.