DAP fertilizer Monthly Price - Algerian Dinar per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
May 2010 - Mar 2026: 55,911.930 (180.95%)
Chart

Description: DAP (diammonium phosphate), standard size, bulk, spot, f.o.b. US Gulf

Unit: Algerian Dinar per Metric Ton



Source: Fertilizer Week; Fertilizer International; World Bank.

See also: Agricultural production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

Diammonium phosphate (DAP) is a concentrated phosphate fertilizer used to supply both phosphorus and nitrogen to crops. It is typically traded as a granular solid and priced on a per-metric-ton basis, with market references often quoted as DAP spot prices on an FOB US Gulf basis. The US Gulf benchmark is widely used because the Gulf Coast is a major export and distribution hub with established access to phosphate rock, ammonia, rail, barge, and ocean freight routes. DAP is valued for its relatively high nutrient content and ease of handling in bulk fertilizer systems.

DAP is applied to a wide range of field crops, including cereals, oilseeds, and row crops, where phosphorus supports root development, early growth, and energy transfer within the plant. It is also used in blended fertilizers and in some industrial applications, though agriculture is the dominant use. Because it contains both phosphate and ammonium nutrients, DAP competes with other phosphate fertilizers and with blended nutrient products in farm input markets.

Supply Drivers

DAP supply is shaped by the phosphate rock and ammonia chains that feed its production. Phosphate rock deposits are geographically concentrated in a few long-established mining regions, including North Africa, the Middle East, China, the United States, and parts of the former Soviet sphere. Mining is capital intensive and constrained by ore quality, stripping ratios, beneficiation needs, and transport links from mine to plant and port. Because phosphate rock is not evenly distributed, regional logistics and export infrastructure strongly influence available supply.

Production also depends on ammonia, which is commonly derived from natural gas. This links DAP output to gas availability, fertilizer plant economics, and the cost of energy-intensive chemical processing. Plants require sulfuric acid and other inputs in the broader phosphate chain, so bottlenecks in upstream chemicals can affect finished fertilizer availability. DAP manufacturing is typically concentrated near feedstock sources or export terminals to reduce freight costs.

Supply is further shaped by seasonal production and application cycles. Fertilizer plants often build inventories ahead of planting seasons, while downstream demand can be uneven across regions. Phosphate mining and processing also face environmental permitting, water use constraints, and waste management requirements, all of which can limit expansion or raise costs. Because new mines and chemical plants take many years to develop, supply adjusts slowly to changes in demand.

Demand Drivers

DAP demand is driven primarily by crop nutrition needs, especially in soils with low available phosphorus. Phosphorus is essential for root establishment, flowering, and grain formation, so demand is closely tied to acreage planted in cereals, oilseeds, and other broad-acre crops. Farmers often apply phosphate fertilizers at planting or before planting, which creates seasonal demand patterns linked to crop calendars and soil preparation practices.

Demand is also influenced by substitution among phosphate products. DAP competes with monoammonium phosphate (MAP), triple superphosphate, and blended NPK fertilizers. The choice among these products depends on nutrient ratios, soil chemistry, application method, and local agronomic recommendations. In alkaline soils, DAP can be favored for its handling properties and nutrient concentration, while in some systems MAP or other phosphate sources are preferred.

Long-run demand reflects population growth, dietary change, and the need to maintain crop yields on limited arable land. Phosphate use is relatively inelastic in the short run because farmers cannot easily substitute away from soil nutrient replacement without affecting yields. However, efficiency gains from precision agriculture, soil testing, and improved fertilizer placement can moderate growth in unit demand per hectare. Transport costs and local blending practices also shape regional consumption patterns, especially in inland markets far from ports.

Macro and Financial Drivers

DAP prices are influenced by broad agricultural income conditions, freight costs, and the US dollar exchange rate. Because fertilizer is traded internationally in dollars, a stronger dollar can make imports more expensive in local currency terms and can affect buying behavior in importing regions. Interest rates also matter indirectly through inventory financing and working capital costs for distributors and traders.

Storage and logistics are important because DAP is a physical bulk commodity with seasonal demand. When inventories are ample, nearby supply can pressure spot prices; when stocks are tight relative to planting needs, nearby delivery can command a premium. This creates the possibility of contango or backwardation in regional forward curves, depending on freight, storage, and seasonal demand timing. DAP also tends to move with broader fertilizer and crop input markets because buyers often manage nutrient purchases as part of a whole-farm cost structure.

MonthPriceChange
May 201030,898.49-
Jun 201029,689.85-3.91%
Jul 201031,245.035.24%
Aug 201034,660.6510.93%
Sep 201038,008.149.66%
Oct 201041,353.398.80%
Nov 201041,159.17-0.47%
Dec 201040,216.96-2.29%
Jan 201140,158.69-0.14%
Feb 201130,140.03-24.95%
Mar 201130,686.331.81%
Apr 201129,941.95-2.43%
May 201129,589.86-1.18%
Jun 201141,418.9339.98%
Jul 201143,115.594.10%
Aug 201143,084.97-0.07%
Sep 201143,271.590.43%
Oct 201142,042.75-2.84%
Nov 201141,612.93-1.02%
Dec 201136,562.95-12.14%
Jan 201234,412.95-5.88%
Feb 201232,562.96-5.38%
Mar 201232,972.021.26%
Apr 201235,445.147.50%
May 201236,780.773.77%
Jun 201239,017.086.08%
Jul 201235,333.25-9.44%
Aug 201240,923.2815.82%
Sep 201241,959.632.53%
Oct 201242,275.900.75%
Nov 201238,767.26-8.30%
Dec 201236,980.44-4.61%
Jan 201336,021.56-2.59%
Feb 201336,172.190.42%
Mar 201336,814.181.77%
Apr 201336,267.60-1.48%
May 201333,224.96-8.39%
Jun 201333,423.370.60%
Jul 201332,474.92-2.84%
Aug 201332,161.82-0.96%
Sep 201330,607.12-4.83%
Oct 201330,094.07-1.68%
Nov 201326,875.52-10.69%
Dec 201326,878.400.01%
Jan 201431,511.1617.24%
Feb 201435,080.4711.33%
Mar 201437,771.387.67%
Apr 201432,155.52-14.87%
May 201432,598.461.38%
Jun 201433,416.552.51%
Jul 201435,024.754.81%
Aug 201435,724.332.00%
Sep 201435,610.91-0.32%
Oct 201434,952.07-1.85%
Nov 201434,646.00-0.88%
Dec 201436,364.844.96%
Jan 201539,362.888.24%
Feb 201541,728.676.01%
Mar 201541,420.97-0.74%
Apr 201540,063.38-3.28%
May 201540,694.861.58%
Jun 201541,527.482.05%
Jul 201542,967.953.47%
Aug 201545,049.184.84%
Sep 201545,380.320.74%
Oct 201544,921.54-1.01%
Nov 201541,382.11-7.88%
Dec 201536,534.95-11.71%
Jan 201635,161.71-3.76%
Feb 201634,767.65-1.12%
Mar 201637,068.586.62%
Apr 201635,951.42-3.01%
May 201634,414.43-4.28%
Jun 201633,752.94-1.92%
Jul 201633,765.270.04%
Aug 201634,810.233.09%
Sep 201634,965.170.45%
Oct 201634,167.44-2.28%
Nov 201632,979.85-3.48%
Dec 201632,886.54-0.28%
Jan 201733,900.393.08%
Feb 201735,827.635.69%
Mar 201735,773.98-0.15%
Apr 201734,436.81-3.74%
May 201733,690.50-2.17%
Jun 201733,653.68-0.11%
Jul 201734,143.401.46%
Aug 201735,182.163.04%
Sep 201736,431.293.55%
Oct 201736,797.681.01%
Nov 201739,587.997.58%
Dec 201741,175.234.01%
Jan 201841,180.180.01%
Feb 201842,164.702.39%
Mar 201843,109.432.24%
Apr 201843,962.101.98%
May 201844,611.341.48%
Jun 201845,814.002.70%
Jul 201847,174.742.97%
Aug 201848,428.642.66%
Sep 201849,746.792.72%
Oct 201849,935.110.38%
Nov 201848,607.27-2.66%
Dec 201846,188.30-4.98%
Jan 201945,222.47-2.09%
Feb 201942,389.07-6.27%
Mar 201939,860.15-5.97%
Apr 201938,636.03-3.07%
May 201937,449.82-3.07%
Jun 201937,486.390.10%
Jul 201936,696.10-2.11%
Aug 201935,050.31-4.48%
Sep 201934,324.34-2.07%
Oct 201933,271.27-3.07%
Nov 201929,724.46-10.66%
Dec 201928,494.94-4.14%
Jan 202031,703.0611.26%
Feb 202033,669.026.20%
Mar 202033,462.24-0.61%
Apr 202035,964.757.48%
May 202033,849.79-5.88%
Jun 202035,146.823.83%
Jul 202039,170.3611.45%
Aug 202043,871.6012.00%
Sep 202046,167.205.23%
Oct 202046,031.97-0.29%
Nov 202046,289.320.56%
Dec 202051,008.4110.19%
Jan 202155,883.379.56%
Feb 202170,296.1525.79%
Mar 202171,435.411.62%
Apr 202172,232.161.12%
May 202176,732.956.23%
Jun 202180,968.075.52%
Jul 202182,688.682.13%
Aug 202181,601.80-1.31%
Sep 202187,890.037.71%
Oct 202192,268.684.98%
Nov 2021100,419.808.83%
Dec 2021103,518.803.09%
Jan 202297,565.38-5.75%
Feb 2022105,013.707.63%
Mar 2022133,673.0027.29%
Apr 2022136,943.302.45%
May 2022122,663.70-10.43%
Jun 2022114,271.20-6.84%
Jul 2022114,682.300.36%
Aug 2022106,699.60-6.96%
Sep 2022105,739.40-0.90%
Oct 2022101,686.90-3.83%
Nov 202292,727.59-8.81%
Dec 202286,038.14-7.21%
Jan 202385,954.25-0.10%
Feb 202383,551.64-2.80%
Mar 202382,422.59-1.35%
Apr 202386,269.504.67%
May 202369,332.36-19.63%
Jun 202361,807.67-10.85%
Jul 202361,900.270.15%
Aug 202371,933.3216.21%
Sep 202372,338.390.56%
Oct 202373,342.201.39%
Nov 202372,061.84-1.75%
Dec 202375,764.745.14%
Jan 202480,151.955.79%
Feb 202478,498.02-2.06%
Mar 202483,022.585.76%
Apr 202473,287.71-11.73%
May 202470,158.86-4.27%
Jun 202473,030.884.09%
Jul 202472,479.77-0.75%
Aug 202473,274.421.10%
Sep 202473,460.100.25%
Oct 202476,372.023.96%
Nov 202476,712.450.45%
Dec 202476,036.65-0.88%
Jan 202578,943.923.82%
Feb 202581,532.863.28%
Mar 202582,203.870.82%
Apr 202584,159.702.38%
May 202588,795.405.51%
Jun 202593,451.165.24%
Jul 202595,535.352.23%
Aug 2025103,306.508.13%
Sep 2025101,082.30-2.15%
Oct 202598,010.13-3.04%
Nov 202592,363.64-5.76%
Dec 202581,395.21-11.88%
Jan 202680,414.62-1.20%
Feb 202681,259.231.05%
Mar 202686,810.426.83%

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