Louisiana is a major sugarcane, cotton, and soybean state with the Red River Valley and Mississippi River Delta supporting diverse crop production. Urea is currently priced at $424–$525/ton in Louisiana markets as of spring 2026, reflecting Southern supply chain conditions.
| Benchmark | Price | vs. 2025 |
|---|---|---|
| NOLA barge (national reference) | $420–$520/ton | +15–25% |
| Louisiana co-op / distributor | $424–$525/ton | +16–26% |
| Louisiana retail delivered | $437–$541/ton | +18–28% |
Pre-buy fall 2026 urea before August China restriction decision. If restrictions lift, spot may soften Q4 but the floor is set by natural gas.
Louisiana sits closest to NOLA import terminals; fertilizer prices are among the lowest in the South, tracking NOLA benchmarks with minimal freight premium.
| Driver | Impact |
|---|---|
| China nitrogen export restrictions | China restricted nitrogen exports through August 2026, removing significant global supply. |
| Natural gas cost floor | Natural gas represents 70–80% of urea production cost; European gas prices remain elevated. |
| NOLA barge benchmark | U.S. urea prices are indexed to New Orleans barge prices; inland premium reflects freight to your state. |
| Domestic vs. import balance | U.S. imports about 40% of urea needs; import parity sets the ceiling on domestic prices. |
Louisiana farmers typically source Urea through regional co-operatives, independent retailers, and direct distributor contracts. The most effective strategy in Southern 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, Urea in Louisiana is priced at approximately $424–$525/ton. Prices vary by county, co-op, and contract type. GrainBrief tracks weekly USDA AMS price reports and sends price alerts when signals change.
Louisiana sits in the Southern supply zone. Louisiana sits closest to NOLA import terminals. Premiums over NOLA benchmarks typically run 1–9% 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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