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Integrating diversity into agricultural systems represent a promising way to increase the resilience of crop production. In particular, cultivar mixtures are gaining attention in Europe as a practical way to stabilize wheat yields. However, their impact on wheat baking quality remains unclear. This study examined the effects of cultivar mixtures on grain and flour quality. The experiment involved eight Swiss wheat cultivars grown in pure stands, in every possible 2-cultivar mixture, and in the 8-cultivar mixture. The experiment was repeated in eight year-by-site environments, allowing to evaluate the stability of baking quality in mixtures and pure stands. The results showed that the effects of mixtures – i.e., average performance compared to pure stands – were either neutral or negative for most flour quality parameters. Furthermore, these effects were not due to changes in cultivar proportions within the mixtures, but rather to cultivar-specific alterations in response to being grown in a mixture. Finally, mixtures significantly increased the stability of flour quality, by buffering the effects of fluctuating environmental conditions. This study is the first to extensively investigate flour quality in eight contrasting environments. It demonstrates the potential of cultivar mixtures to mitigate the effects of changing abiotic conditions and ensure stable flour quality. • Wheat cultivar mixtures do not improve flour quality compared to pure stands. • The quality of a mixture is closest to that of its lowest-quality component. • Cultivar mixtures stabilize flour quality across fluctuating environments. • Cultivar mixtures can mitigate the effects of abiotic variations on baking quality.