Fertilizer Subsidy Scheme India 2026 – Urea, DAP Price & DBT Explained
India runs one of the world's largest fertilizer subsidy programmes so that farmers can buy urea, DAP and other nutrients far below their actual cost. But fertilizer raw materials are globally traded and linked to natural gas — so global disruptions directly raise the subsidy bill. This evergreen guide explains how the fertilizer subsidy works, why urea is so cheap, the Nutrient Based Subsidy, the DBT mechanism, and what farmers should know.
Why Fertilizer Is Subsidised in India
Fertilizers are critical for crop yield and food security. Their global prices are volatile and linked to natural gas (for urea) and imported potash/phosphates. To shield farmers and keep food affordable, the government pays the difference between the high actual cost and the low price farmers pay — this gap is the fertilizer subsidy.
Two Subsidy Systems
| System | Applies To | How It Works |
|---|---|---|
| Urea Subsidy | Urea | Government fixes a low Maximum Retail Price (MRP); pays manufacturers/importers the rest |
| Nutrient Based Subsidy (NBS) | DAP, MOP, NPK, complex fertilizers | Fixed subsidy per nutrient (N, P, K, S); MRP set by companies but kept reasonable |
Urea is the most heavily subsidised, which is why it is the cheapest and most used — sometimes leading to imbalanced soil nutrient use.
Why Urea Is So Cheap for Farmers
The government deliberately keeps the urea MRP very low and absorbs the large gap between cost and price as subsidy. This makes urea affordable for even small and marginal farmers, but it also encourages over-use of urea relative to phosphorus and potassium — which is why balanced fertilization and nano-urea are being promoted.
The Global Link: Why Conflicts Raise the Subsidy Bill
Natural gas is the main feedstock for urea. Potash and phosphate are largely imported. When global energy or commodity markets are disrupted by conflict or supply cuts, the cost of producing/importing fertilizer rises sharply. Since the farmer's price stays fixed, the government's subsidy outgo balloons — straining the budget while protecting farmers and food prices.
Direct Benefit Transfer (DBT) in Fertilizers
India uses a unique DBT model for fertilizers: the subsidy is released to the manufacturer/importer only after the actual sale to the farmer is recorded through a Point of Sale (PoS) machine at the retailer, with biometric/Aadhaar authentication. This ensures subsidy is paid on genuine sales, not just dispatch, reducing diversion to industry or across borders.
What Farmers Should Know
- Buy fertilizer only from licensed retailers with a working PoS machine.
- Carry your Aadhaar / Kisan details for authentication at purchase.
- Use soil health card recommendations — balanced NPK use improves yield and saves money.
- Consider nano-urea / nano-DAP where suitable — less volume, easier transport, government-promoted.
- Don't hoard or buy beyond need — it can create artificial local shortages.
Related Government Support for Farmers
- PM-KISAN: ₹6,000/year income support.
- Kisan Credit Card: low-interest crop loans.
- PM Fasal Bima Yojana: crop insurance.
- Soil Health Card: nutrient recommendations to reduce wasteful fertilizer use.