Triple Superphosphate Monthly Price - Singapore Dollar per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Mar 2016 - Mar 2026: 313.268 (78.17%)
Chart

Description: TSP (triple superphosphate), bulk, spot, beginning October 2006, Tunisian origin, granular, fob; previously US origin, f.o.b. US Gulf

Unit: Singapore Dollar 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

Triple superphosphate (TSP) is a concentrated phosphate fertilizer produced by reacting phosphate rock with phosphoric acid. It is typically priced on a free on board (FOB) basis at export hubs, with the US Gulf commonly used as a reference point for spot market assessment. Prices are usually quoted in US dollars per metric ton. TSP is valued for its high phosphorus content and is used primarily as a direct-applied fertilizer in agriculture, especially where soils are deficient in available phosphorus. It is also blended with other fertilizers to create customized nutrient formulations.

In commodity markets, TSP is part of the broader phosphate fertilizer complex, alongside diammonium phosphate, monoammonium phosphate, and single superphosphate. Its market behavior reflects both agricultural nutrient demand and the industrial structure of phosphate rock mining, acid production, and fertilizer granulation. Because phosphorus is an essential plant nutrient with no practical substitute in crop production, TSP remains an important input for field crops, pasture, and perennial plantings.

Supply Drivers

Supply is shaped by the geology of phosphate rock deposits, the availability of sulfur and phosphoric acid, and the location of fertilizer manufacturing capacity near mining or port infrastructure. Major producing regions are concentrated in countries with large sedimentary phosphate reserves and established chemical processing systems, because phosphate rock must be upgraded through beneficiation and acidulation before it becomes TSP. This makes supply more capital intensive than many other agricultural inputs.

Production is constrained by mining depletion, ore grade variation, and the need for continuous operation of acid plants and granulation units. Output depends on the reliability of rail, pipeline, port, and bulk shipping networks, since fertilizer is heavy and relatively low in value per ton compared with many industrial chemicals. Energy costs matter because mining, drying, grinding, and acid production are all energy-intensive. Environmental regulation also affects supply through controls on emissions, gypsum disposal, and water use.

Unlike annual crops, phosphate fertilizer supply does not follow a harvest cycle, but it is still exposed to maintenance outages, weather disruptions at ports, and logistical bottlenecks. Because new mines and chemical plants require long lead times and substantial permitting, supply tends to adjust slowly to changes in demand.

Demand Drivers

Demand is driven by the need to replenish phosphorus removed from soils by crop harvests. TSP is used most heavily in agriculture, where it supports root development, flowering, and early plant growth. It is especially relevant in soils with low plant-available phosphorus, including many weathered tropical soils and intensively farmed temperate soils. Because phosphorus is not readily mobile in soil, placement and timing of application influence agronomic effectiveness, which supports demand for direct-applied fertilizers such as TSP.

Demand is linked to planted acreage, crop mix, and fertilizer application intensity. Field crops such as cereals, oilseeds, and legumes are important end users, while pasture and forage systems also consume phosphate fertilizers to maintain productivity. TSP competes with other phosphate products, particularly diammonium phosphate and monoammonium phosphate, which may be preferred when nitrogen and phosphorus are both needed. Single superphosphate can substitute in some settings, especially where sulfur is also desired.

Seasonality reflects planting calendars and regional application windows, so buying patterns often cluster ahead of field use. Long-run demand is supported by population growth, dietary demand for crop and livestock products, and the need to maintain soil fertility under continuous cultivation. Fertilizer use is also influenced by soil testing practices, extension services, and the economics of crop returns relative to input costs.

Macro and Financial Drivers

TSP prices are influenced by the US dollar because international fertilizer trade is commonly denominated in dollars. A stronger dollar can make dollar-priced fertilizer more expensive in local currency terms for importing countries, which can affect buying behavior. Freight rates, bunker fuel costs, and port congestion also matter because TSP is traded in bulk and shipped long distances.

The commodity is sensitive to broader agricultural cycles and to the cost of capital for inventories. When financing costs rise, merchants and distributors may reduce stockholding, which can tighten spot availability. Storage is feasible but not costless, so market structure can shift between contango and backwardation depending on supply tightness, seasonal demand, and logistics. TSP also tends to move with the wider phosphate fertilizer complex because buyers can switch among phosphate products based on nutrient ratios and relative prices.

MonthPriceChange
Mar 2016400.74-
Apr 2016398.51-0.56%
May 2016404.171.42%
Jun 2016386.41-4.39%
Jul 2016379.69-1.74%
Aug 2016378.97-0.19%
Sep 2016390.012.92%
Oct 2016394.341.11%
Nov 2016401.241.75%
Dec 2016398.61-0.66%
Jan 2017385.98-3.17%
Feb 2017394.562.22%
Mar 2017404.822.60%
Apr 2017398.44-1.57%
May 2017383.65-3.71%
Jun 2017380.62-0.79%
Jul 2017378.20-0.63%
Aug 2017381.700.92%
Sep 2017382.130.11%
Oct 2017385.620.91%
Nov 2017400.313.81%
Dec 2017415.793.87%
Jan 2018423.251.79%
Feb 2018422.50-0.18%
Mar 2018425.950.82%
Apr 2018427.340.33%
May 2018436.432.13%
Jun 2018451.663.49%
Jul 2018469.313.91%
Aug 2018489.534.31%
Sep 2018516.025.41%
Oct 2018530.892.88%
Nov 2018521.68-1.74%
Dec 2018504.85-3.23%
Jan 2019481.48-4.63%
Feb 2019465.32-3.35%
Mar 2019434.65-6.59%
Apr 2019420.39-3.28%
May 2019418.04-0.56%
Jun 2019400.37-4.23%
Jul 2019386.11-3.56%
Aug 2019380.88-1.35%
Sep 2019372.53-2.19%
Oct 2019370.44-0.56%
Nov 2019359.36-2.99%
Dec 2019330.47-8.04%
Jan 2020322.89-2.29%
Feb 2020340.475.44%
Mar 2020347.061.94%
Apr 2020349.010.56%
May 2020344.59-1.27%
Jun 2020334.60-2.90%
Jul 2020363.878.75%
Aug 2020378.383.99%
Sep 2020385.791.96%
Oct 2020394.362.22%
Nov 2020394.520.04%
Dec 2020426.968.22%
Jan 2021447.474.80%
Feb 2021602.4534.63%
Mar 2021614.812.05%
Apr 2021637.703.72%
May 2021702.2210.12%
Jun 2021733.174.41%
Jul 2021752.002.57%
Aug 2021752.090.01%
Sep 2021773.742.88%
Oct 2021834.877.90%
Nov 2021901.838.02%
Dec 2021937.974.01%
Jan 2022910.90-2.89%
Feb 2022915.620.52%
Mar 20221,077.2817.66%
Apr 20221,169.008.51%
May 20221,143.82-2.15%
Jun 20221,010.24-11.68%
Jul 20221,026.231.58%
Aug 2022974.21-5.07%
Sep 20221,001.142.76%
Oct 2022961.68-3.94%
Nov 2022868.10-9.73%
Dec 2022790.72-8.91%
Jan 2023755.21-4.49%
Feb 2023728.54-3.53%
Mar 2023721.01-1.03%
Apr 2023732.571.60%
May 2023650.11-11.26%
Jun 2023525.18-19.22%
Jul 2023522.86-0.44%
Aug 2023608.5916.40%
Sep 2023629.643.46%
Oct 2023640.921.79%
Nov 2023624.34-2.59%
Dec 2023597.62-4.28%
Jan 2024601.920.72%
Feb 2024610.941.50%
Mar 2024601.72-1.51%
Apr 2024600.46-0.21%
May 2024587.68-2.13%
Jun 2024640.378.97%
Jul 2024680.966.34%
Aug 2024667.41-1.99%
Sep 2024654.05-2.00%
Oct 2024659.480.83%
Nov 2024656.34-0.48%
Dec 2024643.50-1.96%
Jan 2025651.081.18%
Feb 2025647.56-0.54%
Mar 2025639.40-1.26%
Apr 2025657.032.76%
May 2025700.966.69%
Jun 2025823.4817.48%
Jul 2025839.181.91%
Aug 2025852.211.55%
Sep 2025853.590.16%
Oct 2025852.68-0.11%
Nov 2025829.59-2.71%
Dec 2025695.51-16.16%
Jan 2026680.14-2.21%
Feb 2026679.69-0.07%
Mar 2026714.005.05%

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