Tips to Help Growers Stretch Their Nitrogen Investment This Season
Nitrogen has always been one of growers’ largest input costs. In a year when operating costs are expected to be up 4–6% for corn and soybean growers compared to 2025, the scrutiny on every input dollar becomes even more pronounced.
2026 is not a breakout year for new cost inflation, but it extends a high-cost era that began in 2021–2022. Compared with historical norms, growers are operating in a structurally elevated input-cost environment, especially for fertilizer. Compared to last year, fertilizer prices are up 10–20%, and spiking even higher in certain markets.
Price volatility and uncertain weather patterns are forcing growers to make tough decisions, often leading them to pull back on application rates to protect their bottom lines.
But cutting back doesn’t eliminate risk. It shifts it.
“As nitrogen prices keep climbing, growers are likely to scale back,” says Robb Mohr, Wilbur-Ellis branded nutrition manager. “Historically, they usually try to fertilize to achieve that top-end yield. This year, they may be fertilizing for their farm average instead.”
That shift creates a narrow margin for error. If weather conditions turn favorable, crops may demand more nitrogen than what was applied. The opportunity for high yields remains, but only if nitrogen is available when the plant needs it.
That’s why getting more from every pound matters more than ever.
Don’t forget the basics of nitrogen management
In uncertain years, fundamentals tend to carry more weight. The 4R nutrient stewardship framework, right rate, right time, right place and right source, remains the foundation of efficient nitrogen management. Applying the right rate is only part of the equation. When and how nitrogen is applied can have just as much impact on ROI.
Mohr emphasizes that nitrogen use efficiency starts with understanding how the nutrient behaves in the soil.
“Once nitrogen is in the ammonium form, it can do one good thing and three bad things,” he explains. “We want the plant to take it up, but it can also leach, denitrify or volatilize.” Each of those loss pathways represents dollars leaving the field, and in a high-cost year, minimizing those losses becomes essential.
Nitrogen loss isn’t a new challenge. Volatilization can send nitrogen into the atmosphere, leaching can move it beyond the root zone and denitrification can convert it into gases lost to the air. Together, these processes can significantly reduce the amount of nitrogen available to the crop.
Seek season-long nitrogen solutions
Nitrogen stabilizers play a key role in protecting against nitrogen losses. By slowing conversion processes and keeping nitrogen in a plant-available form longer, they help extend the window for uptake.
“It’s super important to put a nitrogen stabilizer with your application,” Mohr says. “You want as much of that nitrogen as possible available to the plant, not lost off the field.” Split applications can further reduce risk by applying nitrogen closer to peak demand and limiting exposure to early-season losses while improving efficiency.
Crops don’t use nitrogen evenly throughout the season. Demand ramps up quickly during key growth stages, especially in corn. Applying all nitrogen early assumes it will still be there later, which can be a risky bet in unpredictable conditions.
A more effective approach is to align nitrogen management with crop demand, using strategies like side-dress or Y-drop applications to deliver nutrients when the plant needs them most.
Products like NUTRIO N-TUNE can support that strategy by providing a steady, supplemental source of nitrogen.
“You can put enough nitrogen down for your farm average and then use N-TUNE to help finish the crop,” Mohr explains. “It’s a way to still shoot for higher yields without a huge upfront cost.” Rather than replacing traditional nitrogen solutions, it complements them by helping bridge gaps when demand increases or conditions change.
Invest in knowledge and experience
In a high-cost nitrogen year, success often comes down to making informed, timely decisions. Doing so requires more than just products. It requires insight, experience and access to the right tools when they’re needed.
“We’re like your on-demand tool guy,” Mohr says. “We bring all the tools you need to make the best decisions, raise the best crop and get the best return on your investment.”
High input costs don’t leave much room for inefficiency, but they do create an opportunity to refine nitrogen management and focus on what truly drives results. By following the 4Rs, protecting against loss and aligning applications with crop demand, growers can make the most of every pound they apply.