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Recent advances in satellite missions, particularly the Landsat, Sentinel, and Gaofen series, have led to the rapid accumulation of high-quality remote sensing data with frequent revisits. As these data have become more widely available, Satellite Image Time Series (SITS) have become an important tool for monitoring Earth surface dynamics. SITS now supports a wide range of applications, including precision agriculture, Land Use/Cover Change (LULCC) monitoring, environmental management, and disaster response. This growth has also promoted the development of advanced SITS classification datasets. However, existing reviews have mainly focused on SITS classification algorithms or specific applications, while systematic comparisons of public SITS benchmark datasets remain limited. This lack of synthesis makes it difficult for researchers to navigate fragmented resources and select datasets that match specific scientific or operational tasks. To address this gap, this paper provides a comprehensive review and analysis of 29 publicly available medium-to-high-resolution SITS classification benchmark datasets released between 2017 and 2025. These datasets are intended for training, testing, and validating land-cover classification algorithms, rather than for direct use as operational map products. We conduct a detailed statistical and comparative analysis of these datasets, focusing on their key characteristics across spectral, temporal, and spatial dimensions, as well as their labeling systems. In addition, this review summarizes the SITS classification algorithms that have been developed and benchmarked using these datasets. Finally, we identify the main challenges in constructing and applying SITS classification datasets and discuss future research directions, particularly in data reconstruction, multimodal fusion, change analysis, and advanced model architectures. This survey provides the research community with a systematic overview of SITS classification benchmark datasets and aims to support continued progress in this rapidly developing field.
Zhang et al. (Fri,) studied this question.