Urea Monthly Price - New Zealand Dollar per Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Apr 2021 - Mar 2026: 778.548 (169.06%)
Chart

Description: Urea, (Black Sea), bulk, spot, f.o.b. Black Sea (primarily Yuzhnyy) beginning July 1991; for 1985-91 (June) f.o.b. Eastern Europe

Unit: New Zealand 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

Urea is a nitrogen fertilizer and industrial chemical traded in bulk and typically priced on commodity markets in US dollars per metric ton. In fertilizer markets, the standard reference is often the spot price for bulk urea in Eastern Europe, which serves as one of several regional benchmarks used to compare international trade flows. Urea is produced by combining ammonia and carbon dioxide under high pressure, then granulating or prilling the result for agricultural use. It is the most widely used solid nitrogen fertilizer because it contains a high concentration of plant-available nitrogen and is relatively easy to transport and apply.

Its main use is in crop production, especially for cereals, oilseeds, and other nitrogen-responsive crops. Urea is also used in industrial applications such as resins, adhesives, and certain chemical formulations. Because nitrogen is essential for plant growth, urea demand is closely tied to global fertilizer application patterns, cropping intensity, and the economics of substitute nitrogen sources such as ammonium nitrate, urea ammonium nitrate, and anhydrous ammonia.

Supply Drivers

Urea supply depends first on ammonia production, because ammonia is the principal feedstock. As a result, regions with abundant and low-cost natural gas tend to be structurally advantaged in urea manufacturing, since gas is both an energy source and the hydrogen input for ammonia synthesis. Production is concentrated in countries with large gas reserves, integrated petrochemical systems, or access to low-cost feedstock and export terminals. Transport infrastructure matters because urea is a bulk commodity that moves through ports, rail networks, and storage facilities; bottlenecks in these systems can affect regional availability and price differentials.

Supply is also shaped by the operating cycle of fertilizer plants, which require maintenance shutdowns and are sensitive to energy costs, environmental constraints, and plant reliability. Unlike harvested crops, urea output is industrial rather than seasonal, but it still reflects gas availability, outage risk, and shipping logistics. Weather can affect supply indirectly by disrupting port loading, inland transport, or gas production in producing regions. Because ammonia plants are capital-intensive and slow to build, supply adjusts with long lags. This makes the market sensitive to disruptions in a few exporting regions and to changes in the relative cost of natural gas, coal-based feedstocks, and freight.

Demand Drivers

Urea demand is driven primarily by agriculture, where it supplies nitrogen for crop growth and yield formation. Demand is strongest in regions with intensive cereal production, multiple cropping seasons, or soils that require regular nitrogen replenishment. Because nitrogen is applied repeatedly rather than stored in the soil for long periods, fertilizer demand is tied to planting decisions, acreage, and crop prices. Seasonal application patterns are important: demand often rises ahead of sowing and top-dressing periods, when farmers purchase fertilizer for immediate use.

Substitution is a major feature of the market. Farmers and distributors can switch among urea, ammonium nitrate, urea ammonium nitrate, and anhydrous ammonia depending on relative prices, local regulations, handling requirements, and agronomic conditions. Urea is often favored where transport and storage simplicity matter, since it is stable and widely distributed. Industrial demand is smaller but persistent, coming from resin and chemical manufacturing. Long-run demand is also influenced by population growth, dietary change, and the need to maintain crop yields on limited farmland. In some regions, irrigation, mechanization, and improved seed varieties increase the effectiveness of nitrogen fertilizer, reinforcing urea consumption.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Urea prices are sensitive to the US dollar because international trade is commonly denominated in dollars, so exchange-rate changes affect local purchasing power and import costs. Energy prices matter through the ammonia feedstock link, and freight rates influence delivered prices across importing regions. Because urea can be stored, the market also reflects inventory carrying costs: when financing and storage are expensive, nearby prices may trade differently from deferred prices, shaping contango or backwardation in forward markets.

Broader macro conditions affect fertilizer affordability and farm input budgets. Higher interest rates can reduce working capital availability for distributors and farmers, while inflation in energy, transport, and labor costs can raise production expenses. Urea also tends to move with other nitrogen fertilizers because they share feedstock and demand fundamentals. Its price relationship with grain markets is indirect but important: stronger crop prices can improve fertilizer application economics, while weaker crop prices can encourage lower application rates or substitution toward cheaper nitrogen sources.

MonthPriceChange
Apr 2021460.51-
May 2021459.53-0.21%
Jun 2021552.9320.32%
Jul 2021632.3614.37%
Aug 2021641.701.48%
Sep 2021594.26-7.39%
Oct 2021986.7166.04%
Nov 20211,279.0229.62%
Dec 20211,313.422.69%
Jan 20221,255.80-4.39%
Feb 20221,116.20-11.12%
Mar 20221,272.0913.97%
Apr 20221,364.377.25%
May 20221,106.24-18.92%
Jun 20221,084.46-1.97%
Jul 2022968.96-10.65%
Aug 2022943.99-2.58%
Sep 20221,141.2020.89%
Oct 20221,119.74-1.88%
Nov 2022977.13-12.74%
Dec 2022816.85-16.40%
Jan 2023693.20-15.14%
Feb 2023567.42-18.15%
Mar 2023505.61-10.89%
Apr 2023504.44-0.23%
May 2023529.084.88%
Jun 2023469.07-11.34%
Jul 2023537.1714.52%
Aug 2023642.7719.66%
Sep 2023641.46-0.20%
Oct 2023696.698.61%
Nov 2023645.22-7.39%
Dec 2023571.70-11.39%
Jan 2024543.64-4.91%
Feb 2024573.265.45%
Mar 2024542.02-5.45%
Apr 2024536.68-0.99%
May 2024470.33-12.36%
Jun 2024547.4916.41%
Jul 2024568.533.84%
Aug 2024563.50-0.88%
Sep 2024542.78-3.68%
Oct 2024614.8713.28%
Nov 2024595.80-3.10%
Dec 2024608.132.07%
Jan 2025675.3411.05%
Feb 2025769.0213.87%
Mar 2025689.28-10.37%
Apr 2025666.84-3.26%
May 2025660.88-0.89%
Jun 2025697.495.54%
Jul 2025826.7618.53%
Aug 2025860.324.06%
Sep 2025782.95-8.99%
Oct 2025683.99-12.64%
Nov 2025725.006.00%
Dec 2025679.28-6.31%
Jan 2026720.276.03%
Feb 2026784.988.98%
Mar 20261,239.0657.85%

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