We use our leaves as mulch. We have not come up with a method I really like yet, but here is what we have tried in the past. We have about 2 1/2 acres now, but we have many small natural areas interwoven between mower and tractor width trails behind the house. We have a large pin oak in front with a large mulched circle around it (cause nothing will grow under there but poison ivy).
Some of our neighbors rake and bag leaves next to the street for the city to pickup. Other neighbors just rake everything to the street (and often into the street) for the city to come by about 3 or 4 times a year to vacuum them up in their big truck. These options are my least favorite, nor do I use them.
What I used to do when I had a large riding mower with a triple bagger is mow the leaves into the rear bagger and distribute the chopped leaves around the yard as mulch into the natural areas and around trees, shrubs and flowers. The bags filled up quick but provided free mulch.
I have also attached my rear scrap blade to my tractor, turned the blade backwards so it would not dig in and pull the leaves to the back portion of our lot into a big pile. I use this method also to scrap snow off our gravel driveways, so it does not disturb the gravel very much. I have often thought of trying a rock rake or pine straw rake to drag leaves off, but I do not own either of those two attachments. The backwards scrap blade does a pretty good job, but at the cost of some lawn destruction, but I am not one of those that obsess about the looks of the lawn.
Another method that I use now, since I do not have a bagger anymore, is to use the riding mower to blow the leaves into the natural areas. This often requires driving forward and backward slowly moving the leaves to one side of the lawn to eventually blow the mulched leaves into the natural areas and around trees, or to begin mowing in the middle of the lawn driving in circles until everything is blow to the outside edges. Not the greatest solution, but still easier than raking and faster than blowing.