Potassium Chloride Monthly Price - Kuwaiti Dinar per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Jun 2020 - Mar 2026: 54.322 (87.17%)
Chart

Description: Potassium chloride (muriate of potash), standard grade, spot, f.o.b. Vancouver

Unit: Kuwaiti 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

Potassium chloride, commonly called muriate of potash (MOP), is the most widely traded potassium fertilizer and a key source of plant-available potassium. On commodity markets it is typically priced as standard-grade MOP, often quoted on an FOB basis at export hubs such as Vancouver, with units expressed in US dollars per metric ton. Potassium chloride is valued for its high potassium content, relatively simple handling, and compatibility with bulk fertilizer distribution systems. It is used primarily in agriculture for crops that require potassium to support water regulation, root development, disease resistance, and yield formation.

The material is usually sold as granular or standard crystalline product, with quality specifications tied to nutrient content, moisture, and particle size. Because potassium is an essential macronutrient, demand is linked to crop production rather than discretionary consumption. MOP is one of the three core fertilizer nutrients alongside nitrogen and phosphate, and it is often applied in blended fertilizers or as a standalone input depending on soil conditions and crop requirements.

Supply Drivers

Supply is shaped by the geology of evaporite deposits, since potassium chloride is mined from underground or solution-mined potash ore bodies formed by ancient saline basins. Production is concentrated in a limited number of long-established regions, including Canada, Russia, Belarus, Germany, and parts of the Middle East, where large deposits and supporting infrastructure make extraction economical. Because potash mining requires substantial capital investment, deep shafts or solution wells, and specialized processing, supply responds slowly to price changes.

Production is also constrained by transport logistics. Potash is bulky, and export competitiveness depends on rail access, port capacity, and reliable bulk shipping routes. Inland mines often rely on long-distance rail corridors to reach seaborne markets, so bottlenecks in rail or port systems can affect availability. In solution mining, brine chemistry, water access, and processing efficiency matter, while underground mining faces geological variability and depletion of higher-grade zones over time.

Unlike annual crops, potash supply does not follow a harvest cycle, but maintenance outages, mine development schedules, and permitting timelines create periodic disruptions. Because new capacity takes many years to develop, the market tends to adjust through inventory changes and trade flows rather than rapid production expansion.

Demand Drivers

Demand is driven by agriculture, especially field crops that remove substantial potassium from soils, such as corn, soybeans, wheat, rice, sugarcane, and many fruits and vegetables. Potassium supports plant metabolism, drought tolerance, and quality characteristics, so application rates depend on soil fertility, crop rotation, and yield targets. Demand is therefore tied to planted area, agronomic practice, and the intensity of fertilizer use rather than to direct consumer demand.

Substitution is limited because potassium is an essential nutrient, but farmers can adjust application rates, timing, and fertilizer blends when prices change. Some soils contain naturally high potassium reserves, reducing immediate need, while others require regular replenishment. Potassium chloride competes with other potassium fertilizers such as potassium sulfate in chloride-sensitive crops, though MOP remains the standard product for most broad-acre uses because of its lower cost per unit of potassium.

Seasonality matters because fertilizer purchases often cluster ahead of planting and top-dressing windows. Demand also reflects long-run changes in diet, population, and crop yields, since higher agricultural output generally requires more nutrient replacement. Soil testing, extension practices, and fertilizer subsidy structures influence application intensity, but the underlying driver remains the need to maintain soil fertility over repeated harvests.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Potassium chloride prices are influenced by the US dollar because international fertilizer trade is commonly denominated in dollars, so exchange-rate movements affect local purchasing power and export competitiveness. Freight rates, energy costs, and interest rates also matter because mining, processing, and shipping are capital- and logistics-intensive. Higher financing costs can affect inventory holding and project development, while lower costs can support stockbuilding.

As a storable bulk commodity, potash can exhibit inventory-driven price cycles. When supply is ample relative to near-term farm demand, storage and financing costs can encourage softer nearby pricing; when logistics tighten or buyers rebuild inventories, nearby prices can strengthen relative to deferred delivery. Correlation with broader commodity markets is often indirect, working through agricultural income, energy costs, and general inflation in input prices rather than through a direct financial linkage.

MonthPriceChange
Jun 202062.32-
Jul 202062.16-0.25%
Aug 202061.90-0.43%
Sep 202061.930.05%
Oct 202061.930.01%
Nov 202061.88-0.09%
Dec 202061.60-0.45%
Jan 202161.36-0.39%
Feb 202161.25-0.18%
Mar 202161.18-0.12%
Apr 202161.04-0.22%
May 202160.94-0.17%
Jun 202160.94-0.01%
Jul 202160.91-0.04%
Aug 202166.479.13%
Sep 202166.510.06%
Oct 202166.660.23%
Nov 202166.780.18%
Dec 202166.870.14%
Jan 2022237.63255.35%
Feb 2022239.480.78%
Mar 2022297.0724.05%
Apr 2022366.9823.54%
May 2022358.49-2.31%
Jun 2022337.57-5.84%
Jul 2022311.24-7.80%
Aug 2022272.90-12.32%
Sep 2022225.84-17.25%
Oct 2022192.89-14.59%
Nov 2022173.73-9.93%
Dec 2022157.49-9.35%
Jan 2023155.45-1.29%
Feb 2023151.98-2.23%
Mar 2023138.87-8.63%
Apr 2023124.79-10.14%
May 2023114.27-8.43%
Jun 2023100.73-11.85%
Jul 2023104.633.87%
Aug 2023108.633.82%
Sep 2023108.620.00%
Oct 2023105.61-2.77%
Nov 2023102.37-3.07%
Dec 202396.04-6.18%
Jan 202491.06-5.18%
Feb 202489.05-2.21%
Mar 202492.313.67%
Apr 202493.871.68%
May 202494.280.44%
Jun 202495.000.76%
Jul 202491.94-3.22%
Aug 202489.75-2.38%
Sep 202487.48-2.52%
Oct 202485.11-2.71%
Nov 202486.311.41%
Dec 202489.934.19%
Jan 202593.143.57%
Feb 202598.395.64%
Mar 2025103.645.33%
Apr 2025107.984.19%
May 2025111.233.00%
Jun 2025111.16-0.06%
Jul 2025110.62-0.49%
Aug 2025108.89-1.56%
Sep 2025107.47-1.31%
Oct 2025107.470.01%
Nov 2025108.240.72%
Dec 2025109.481.15%
Jan 2026111.872.18%
Feb 2026113.741.67%
Mar 2026116.642.55%

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