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Slow-Release Fertilizer

Quick definition

A nutrient product formulated to release nutrients gradually over weeks or months, providing steady feeding and reducing risk of nutrient leaching or burn.

In plain terms

Slow-release fertilizers (coated particles, organic materials, or specially formulated synthetics) dissolve slowly, feeding plants steadily over time. They reduce leaching loss, minimize nutrient burn, and require fewer applications than fast-release fertilizers. The tradeoff: they're more expensive and you can't quickly adjust nutrition if deficiency appears. Organic fertilizers are naturally slow-release.

Why this matters

Slow-release fertilizers feed plants steadily and are safer than fast-release, reducing management and risk.

In practice

Examples

  • Slow-release fertilizer applied once in spring; feeds through entire growing season.
  • Fast-release fertilizer applied once; leaches away in 2-3 weeks; requires multiple applications.
  • Container plant with slow-release granules; feeds steadily without repeated applications.
  • Organic slow-release fertilizer: feeds over months; reduces burn risk and application frequency.

Practical applications

  • Apply slow-release fertilizer at label rates in spring or early season.
  • Works well for containers and beds; reduces application frequency.
  • Organic fertilizers are naturally slow-release; apply at label rates.
  • If quick nutrient boost needed, combine slow-release with fast-acting foliar spray.
  • Monitor plant growth; adjust slow-release application based on performance.

Connected terms