Rhode Island is the smallest state by area, with limited but productive greenhouse, turf, and vegetable operations. DAP (Diammonium Phosphate) is currently priced at $781–$903/ton in Rhode Island markets as of spring 2026, reflecting Northeast supply chain conditions.
| Benchmark | Price | vs. 2025 |
|---|---|---|
| NOLA barge (national reference) | $640–$740/ton | +15–25% |
| Rhode Island co-op / distributor | $781–$903/ton | +37–47% |
| Rhode Island retail delivered | $800–$925/ton | +39–49% |
Hold aggressive pre-buying until August China restriction decision. Spot may correct 10–15% if restrictions lift.
Rhode Island receives fertilizer from Massachusetts distributors; extremely low agricultural volume but farm-direct pricing on specialty inputs can be competitive.
| Driver | Impact |
|---|---|
| China phosphate export ban | China restricted phosphate exports through August 2026, removing ~30% of global trade volume — the single largest price driver. |
| Morocco and Saudi supply | Alternative suppliers (OCP, SABIC) run at capacity but cannot fully offset China volumes. |
| Ammonia input costs | DAP production requires ammonia; elevated natural gas costs raise the cost floor. |
| Spring demand surge | Concentrated spring application demand amplifies price spikes during March–May. |
Rhode Island farmers typically source DAP (Diammonium Phosphate) through regional co-operatives, independent retailers, and direct distributor contracts. The most effective strategy in Northeast markets is to compare co-op pre-pay pricing versus spot retail, as pre-pay discounts of 5–12% are standard for early fall bookings.
As of spring 2026, DAP (Diammonium Phosphate) in Rhode Island is priced at approximately $781–$903/ton. Prices vary by county, co-op, and contract type. GrainBrief tracks weekly USDA AMS price reports and sends price alerts when signals change.
Rhode Island sits in the Northeast supply zone. Rhode Island receives fertilizer from Massachusetts distributors. Premiums over NOLA benchmarks typically run 22–30% depending on season and logistics conditions.
Historically, fall pre-buy programs (August–October) offer the best pricing for the following spring application season. In-season spot prices during March–June carry a 5–15% logistics premium. GrainBrief's weekly signal tells you exactly when to act.
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