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Types of Chemical Fertilizers: What Every Farmer Needs to Know
You might assume that chemical fertilizers are all essentially the same bags of numbers you don’t fully understand, mixed into the soil while you wait for results. But the truth is that every crop has its own nutritional language, and every growth stage has its own unique dietary formula. What benefits wheat at germination may damage tomatoes at flowering. What works for fruit trees may burn leafy vegetables.
This confusion is exactly what drives many farmers to use chemical fertilizers randomly buying urea because a neighbor used it, or adding DAP because a supplier recommended it, without asking: is this fertilizer right for my soil? Is this the nutrient my crop actually needs right now? The result is almost always the same: a lower yield than expected, and soil that deteriorates with each passing season.
At Al-Qawafel, we believe that a good fertilizer is not enough you need the right type, at the right time, in the right dose. This guide gives you a clear map of the types of chemical fertilizers, with decisive comparisons and practical selection criteria, built on 30 years of experience across 40 countries. By the end, you’ll know exactly which fertilizer delivers maximum yield without damaging your soil.
What Are the Types of Chemical Fertilizers for Plants?
Chemical fertilizers are classified by the primary nutrient they supply to the plant. Each type plays a specific role in supporting growth and productivity.
Nitrogen Fertilizers (Nitrate Fertilizers)
Nitrogen is the element of vegetative growth it is present in proteins and chlorophyll, giving the plant its deep green color and driving strong, vigorous growth.
| Type | Formula | N Content | Key Characteristics |
| Urea | CO(NH₂)₂ | 46% | Most economical per N unit; requires soil conversion; risk of volatilization in heat |
| Ammonium nitrate | NH₄NO₃ | 33.5% | Fast absorption; unstable and requires careful storage |
| Ammonium sulfate | (NH₄)₂SO₄ | 21% | Contains sulfur; suited to alkaline soils; acidifies soil over time |
| Calcium nitrate | Ca(NO₃)₂ | 15.5% | Supplies calcium alongside nitrogen; beneficial for tomatoes and fruit crops |
For a complete breakdown of urea specifically including formulation types, application rates, foliar spray guidelines, and risks of misuse see our dedicated guide: What Is Urea Fertilizer and How to Use It
Phosphorus Fertilizers
Phosphorus is the element of roots and flowers. It stimulates strong root formation, promotes flowering and fruit set, and plays a central role in energy transfer within the plant.
Single superphosphate (SSP): 16–20% P₂O₅. Traditional formulation, slow-dissolving, well-suited to clay soils.
Triple superphosphate (TSP): 46% P₂O₅. Concentrated, fast-dissolving, ideal for soil application where high phosphorus is needed.
DAP (Di-Ammonium Phosphate): 46% P + 18% N. One of the most widely used phosphorus fertilizers feeds the plant with both primary nutrients simultaneously.
Phosphoric acid: 52–54% P₂O₅. Liquid form, added through the irrigation system; simultaneously lowers soil pH particularly useful in alkaline soils.
Potassium Fertilizers
Potassium is the element of quality and resilience. It improves fruit size and quality, increases the plant’s resistance to drought and disease, and supports photosynthesis efficiency.
Potassium sulfate (SOP): The preferred choice for vegetables and fruits no chloride risk.
Potassium chloride (MOP): Highest concentration, most economical, but adds chloride which can harm chloride-sensitive crops.
Potassium nitrate: Supplies both potassium and nitrogen simultaneously excellent for flowering and fruiting stages in crops that need both nutrients at once.
Compound Fertilizers
Compound fertilizers contain two or more macronutrients in defined ratios, delivering complete nutrition in a single application.
| Formulation | Type | Best Use |
| 20-20-20 | Balanced | General nutrition across all growth stages |
| 13-40-13 | High phosphorus | Establishment stage, root development, flowering stimulation |
| 12-12-36 | High potassium | Fruiting and fruit-sizing stage |
| 30-10-10 | High nitrogen | Vegetative growth in leafy crops |
For guidance on selecting the right NPK formulation for each growth stage and crop type, see our full guide:Best Fertilizer for Increasing Crop Yield
Decisive Comparisons: Which Fertilizer Is Right for Your Soil and Crop?
NPK vs. DAP: Which Should You Choose?
When choosing between a compound NPK fertilizer and DAP, the answer depends on your crop’s growth stage and actual nutritional needs not on habit or supplier recommendation.
Nutritional content:
DAP carries a fixed composition of 18% nitrogen and 46% phosphorus, making it a concentrated phosphorus source. Compound NPK fertilizers offer a range of ratios 20-20-20 (balanced), 13-40-13 (high phosphorus), 12-12-36 (high potassium) giving you the flexibility to match the fertilizer precisely to your crop’s current stage.
Use case:
DAP is primarily used at establishment, when the plant needs phosphorus to build a strong root system before vegetative growth begins. NPK is used throughout the entire season switching formulations as the crop moves from vegetative growth (high N) to flowering (high P) to fruiting (high K).
Cost:
DAP is highly economical per unit of phosphorus, making it the preferred choice when high phosphorus is needed at low cost. Compound NPK fertilizers carry a higher price point due to their multiple-nutrient composition, but they eliminate the need to purchase and blend three separate fertilizers.
Al-Qawafel tip: Use DAP at establishment to support root development, then transition to specialized NPK formulations as the crop develops high nitrogen for vegetative growth, high phosphorus for flowering, high potassium for fruit sizing.
Organic vs. Chemical Fertilizers: Key Differences
| Feature | Organic Fertilizer | Chemical Fertilizer |
| Source | Natural (plant or animal origin) | Synthetic (industrial production) |
| Speed of effect | Slow requires decomposition | Fast immediately or rapidly available |
| Duration of effect | Long-term feeds the soil | Short-term feeds the plant directly |
| Effect on soil | Improves structure long-term | Can increase salinity and reduce microbial activity |
| Cost | Relatively higher | Lower |
Al-Qawafel tip: Combining both types is the optimal approach. Use chemical fertilizers for fast nutrition during critical growth stages; use organic fertilizers for long-term soil improvement and sustained biological activity.
Urea vs. Ammonium Nitrate: The Key Differences
Nitrogen concentration:
Urea contains 46% nitrogen the highest of any solid nitrogen fertilizer compared to 33.5% for ammonium nitrate. This makes urea more concentrated and more economical per nitrogen unit.
Soil pH effect:
Urea is initially slightly alkaline, then gradually acidifies the soil over time. Ammonium nitrate is acidic from the start, making it better suited to alkaline soils that need pH reduction.
Absorption speed:
Ammonium nitrate is immediately available for root absorption. Urea requires soil conversion via the enzyme urease a process that takes 1–3 days making ammonium nitrate the faster option in acute deficiency situations.
Stage suitability:
Urea is ideal at the onset of vegetative growth when the plant needs nitrogen to build leaves and stems. Ammonium nitrate is preferred at flowering and fruiting stages, and in alkaline soils with elevated pH.
Volatilization loss:
Urea loses a significant proportion of its nitrogen through volatilization in high heat or when left on the soil surface without incorporation. Ammonium nitrate has a lower volatilization risk, making it more efficient in hot conditions.
Selection Guide: Best Chemical Fertilizer for Your Goal
Best Fertilizer for Root Development
High-phosphorus fertilizer NPK 10-52-10 or DAP. Phosphorus is the essential element for root formation and development. Apply at the establishment stage and before planting; incorporate into the root zone for best absorption.
Best Fertilizer for Fruit Sizing
High-potassium fertilizer NPK 10-10-40 or potassium sulfate. Potassium has the greatest direct impact on fruit size, taste, color, and shelf quality. Apply during the fruiting and fruit-fill stages.
Best Fertilizer for Leafy Crop Production
High-nitrogen fertilizer urea 46%, ammonium sulfate, or NPK 30-10-10. Nitrogen drives vegetative growth and increases leaf density and size. Apply at the onset of growth and during the active vegetative phase avoid excess, which delays flowering.
How to Use Chemical Fertilizers Correctly and Avoid Their Risks
Fertilization Timing by Growth Stage
| Stage | Recommended Fertilizer |
| Pre-planting | Phosphorus and potassium incorporated with tillage |
| Vegetative growth | Nitrogen applied in split doses |
| Pre-flowering | Phosphorus and potassium |
| Fruiting | Potassium applied throughout fruit development |
Al-Qawafel tip: Never fertilize during winter dormancy or in extreme heat. Nutrient absorption is minimal under both conditions, and accumulated fertilizer salts can damage soil structure.
Calculating Dose and Preventing Salinity
Before applying any fertilizer, you must know your crop’s actual nutritional requirements soil analysis is the essential first step for determining the correct dose. Every crop has specific dose requirements that vary by age, type, and growing conditions.
To prevent salt accumulation:
- Split the total seasonal dose into multiple smaller applications rather than one large dose
- Ensure adequate field drainage to prevent salt buildup in the root zone
- Apply fertilizers with irrigation water regularly rather than concentrating them in a single heavy application
If your soil is already showing signs of salt stress, chemical fertilizers will compound the problem. Read our complete guide on causes of soil salinity to understand what’s driving the issue and our guide on fertilizers that treat soil salinity for the corrective program.
Nutrient Lockout in Soil
Nutrient lockout occurs when soil nutrients interact with each other and convert into forms that plant roots cannot absorb. The most common examples:
Phosphorus and calcium: They react together and precipitate into an insoluble compound unavailable to the plant.
Iron and manganese: In alkaline soils, both convert to forms that are chemically present but biologically unavailable plants show deficiency symptoms even when the elements are in the soil.
Understanding lockout explains why simply adding more fertilizer does not always solve a deficiency the issue is availability, not quantity.
Combining Chemical Fertilizers with Compost
Integrating chemical fertilizers with compost achieves the ideal balance between fast nutrition and long-term soil improvement. The combined approach delivers multiple compounding benefits:
Improved chemical fertilizer uptake: Compost improves soil structure, which increases the efficiency with which roots absorb chemical nutrients.
Reduced nitrogen loss: Organic matter acts as a nitrogen reservoir, reducing losses through volatilization and leaching.
Microbial activation: Compost feeds the soil microorganisms that decompose organic matter and continuously release nutrients in plant-available forms.
Better water retention: Reduces water stress on the plant and keeps nutrients available for longer between irrigation cycles.
Al-Qawafel tip: Add compost at the start of the season during tillage, then apply chemical fertilizers in calibrated doses throughout the growth stages. This combination gives you the speed of chemical nutrition and the lasting improvement of organic matter in the same field, in the same season.
Types of chemical fertilizers are not just names on bags they are precise tools in the hands of a knowledgeable farmer. At Al-Qawafel, we supply the best chemical fertilizers from verified sources, with free consultations to determine the right formulation for your soil and crop. We start by analyzing your needs, then build a complete nutrition program that integrates chemical and organic fertilizers and we stay with you step by step until you see the results.
Don’t leave your productivity to chance. Contact the Al-Qawafel team today at alqawafel.com, or visit your nearest branch. You’ll receive a complete program with clear instructions to increase your yield.