Nevada is a small hay, cattle, and onion state with the Humboldt and Truckee River corridors supporting limited irrigated agriculture in a largely arid landscape. Glyphosate (41% AI) is currently priced at $17–$24/gallon in Nevada markets as of spring 2026, reflecting Mountain West supply chain conditions.
| Benchmark | Price | vs. 2025 |
|---|---|---|
| NOLA barge (national reference) | $14–$20/gallon | +15–25% |
| Nevada co-op / distributor | $17–$24/gallon | +37–47% |
| Nevada retail delivered | $18–$25/gallon | +39–49% |
Glyphosate is one of the few inputs priced favorably. Buy season supply early; tariff changes on Chinese generics could spike prices mid-year.
Nevada receives fertilizer from California and Idaho distributors; very low crop acre volume means farmers often pay spot prices with limited co-op leverage, adding 18–24% over NOLA.
| Driver | Impact |
|---|---|
| Chinese generic production | China dominates global glyphosate API production; U.S. tariff policy determines import costs. |
| Tariff uncertainty | U.S.-China tariff changes in 2025–2026 added 10–25% landed cost variability on imported generics. |
| Generic vs. branded pricing | Generic 41% AI is functionally identical to branded Roundup; 30–40% cost savings available. |
| Resistance management costs | Glyphosate-resistant weeds force higher-cost alternative products on affected acres. |
Nevada farmers typically source Glyphosate (41% AI) through regional co-operatives, independent retailers, and direct distributor contracts. The most effective strategy in Mountain West 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, Glyphosate (41% AI) in Nevada is priced at approximately $17–$24/gallon. Prices vary by county, co-op, and contract type. GrainBrief tracks weekly USDA AMS price reports and sends price alerts when signals change.
Nevada sits in the Mountain West supply zone. Nevada receives fertilizer from California and Idaho 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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