# Fertilizer prices fall 50% but US farmers face a 2027 wait for real relief
> Urea dropped by half from its April peak as Hormuz reopens, but USDA projects input costs elevated through 2027; farmers who cut nitrogen this spring will lose yields this fall

**Meta:** type: story · date: 2026-06-25 · heads: How Life Changes, Whose Money · 7 takes · 5 lenses · 2 regions

## Summary

Urea, the world's most widely traded nitrogen fertilizer, has fallen roughly 50% from its April 2026 peak as the [Strait of Hormuz](/en/entity/strait-of-hormuz) reopens and the [US-Iran ceasefire](/en/n/iran-us-ceasefire-mou) holds. But US farmers say the relief barely registers. Planting was done at peak-crisis prices: one Kansas wheat grower told NPR he spent 23% more on nitrogen this spring than before the war. The USDA projects energy and agricultural input costs will not fall substantially until 2027, and analysts at Farmdoc Daily calculate that the nitrogen spike added $42 to $68 per acre to corn-soy rotation costs. Farmers who reduced nitrogen applications this spring to cut losses face a second blow: lower yields at harvest. The [White House supplemental](/en/n/trump-iran-war-supplemental-jun25) includes $11.1 billion for US farmers, but most of it will not reach growers before 2027 planting decisions.

## The split

US agricultural press frames this as a government failure: $11.1 billion in farm aid moving slowly, while the disruption is immediate. CSIS and IFPRI analysts take a global lens, noting [Iran](/en/entity/iran) contributes roughly 30% of global urea trade through Hormuz-zone shipping, and that the supply shock will take 2-3 crop cycles to clear globally. For food import-dependent states in MENA and Sub-Saharan Africa, the wholesale price drop offers almost nothing: their purchasing power is constrained by currency depreciation against the dollar, and local staple prices lag global markets by months. Al Jazeera and regional Arab media frame the story as evidence that US military action imposed food-security costs on the Global South that the ceasefire does not quickly reverse.

## By the numbers

- 50%, fall in urea price from April 2026 peak to late June
- 23%, extra spring fertilizer cost for a typical US wheat farmer vs. pre-war 2025
- 30%, share of global urea trade estimated to transit Hormuz-zone shipping
- 18%, estimated peak reduction in global nitrogen fertilizer supply at Hormuz closure height
- 3-4%, projected below-trend global wheat output in 2026-27
- $42-$68 per acre, added nitrogen cost in US corn-soy rotation

## Why it matters

Fertilizer is not a luxury. It determines whether the next harvest covers the debt from the last one. With USDA projecting record total farm production costs in 2027, even a 50% fall in wholesale urea offers US farmers little comfort if crop revenues stay below break-even. Globally, the 18% supply gap will take years to repair. The [June FAO-WFP hunger report](/en/n/fao-wfp-hunger-hotspots-june2026) already runs a 31% fertilizer cost spike through every projection for its 13 highest-concern hotspots, covering 318 million people in food crisis. A below-trend wheat harvest in 2026-27 makes that worse.

## What to watch

- Whether the $11.1 billion in US farm aid in the supplemental reaches growers before 2027 planting decisions are locked.
- USDA's August WASDE report: the first read on yield damage from reduced nitrogen applications this spring.
- Whether Iran's resumed fertilizer exports after the ceasefire are fast enough to stabilise 2027 forward prices before global buyers contract.
- WFP's July funding crisis for Somalia: the agency needs $131 million immediately or suspends emergency operations, and fertilizer-driven staple price inflation is a direct multiplier.

## Regional takes (batched by bias / lens)

### US public radio, farm-belt reporting
- **NPR** (United States, en) — Farm-belt interviews show that urea has fallen 50% from its April peak but the disrupted planting season locks in higher costs through harvest; one Kansas wheat farmer spent 23% more on fertilizer this spring than pre-war. USDA projects elevated input costs through 2027, and analysts warn farmers who cut nitrogen this spring will see lower crop yields this fall.
  > "Fertilizer prices are falling, but the disrupted planting season has already locked in higher costs. Farmers who cut nitrogen applications this spring will see lower crop yields this fall."
  Source: https://www.npr.org/2026/06/25/nx-s1-5867650/farmers-fertilizer-prices-iran-trump

### US security policy, supply-chain analysis
- **CSIS** (United States, en) — Links the Hormuz closure to global fertilizer supply disruption; finds Iran accounts for roughly 30% of global urea trade through Hormuz-zone shipping, and estimates 2-3 crop cycles before input-cost shocks fully roll through farm economics globally.
  > "Iran accounts for roughly 30% of global urea trade; the disruption of Hormuz shipping ripples through three crop cycles."
  Source: https://www.csis.org/analysis/iran-fertilizer-and-food-security-risks-impacts-and-policy-responses

### international development economics
- **IFPRI** (Global, en) — Quantifies global supply-chain damage: the Hormuz closure cut global nitrogen fertilizer supply by an estimated 18% at peak disruption, projects 2026-27 global wheat output 3-4% below trend, and flags food import-dependent MENA and Sub-Saharan Africa states as most exposed to prolonged food inflation.
  > "The Hormuz closure cut global nitrogen fertilizer supply by an estimated 18% at its peak, with downstream effects on 2026-27 wheat output of 3-4% below trend."
  Source: https://www.ifpri.org/blog/the-iran-wars-impacts-on-global-fertilizer-markets-and-food-production/

### US agricultural economics
- **Farmdoc Daily (University of Illinois)** (United States, en) — Calculates the nitrogen cost spike at $42-$68 per acre in corn-soybean rotation systems, compressing margins that were already thin after two below-average commodity price seasons; notes that even with wholesale prices falling, the 2026 season's contracted prices are largely already locked in.
  > "The nitrogen cost spike adds $42-$68 per acre for corn-soy systems, compressing already thin margins after two seasons of below-average commodity prices."
  Source: https://farmdocdaily.illinois.edu/2026/05/fertilizer-cost-increases-resulting-from-the-iran-conflict.html

### unlabelled
- **Fortune** (United States, en) — 
  Source: https://fortune.com/2026/04/16/iran-war-fertilizer-prices-skyrocketing-economy-agriculture-american-farmers-donald-trump/
- **AgWeb** (United States, en) — 
  Source: https://www.agweb.com/news/business/strait-hormuz-crisis-why-fertilizer-relief-years-away-u-s-farmers
- **CNBC** (United States, en) — 
  Source: https://www.cnbc.com/2026/03/25/fertilizer-price-iran-war-food-security-inflation-urea-potash-nitrogen-farmers.html

## Across the graph
- Related: [[hormuz-oil-supply-shock]], [[iran-us-ceasefire-mou]], [[oil-hormuz-recovery-slide-2026-06-25]], [[fao-wfp-hunger-hotspots-june2026]], [[trump-iran-war-supplemental-jun25]]
- Entities: United States, Iran, OPEC

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