What is the True Cost of Compost (or manure) in 2026?

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I am updating this post to 2026 because I get regular questions about both the cost of composts and quality of composts (or manure) in my visits with organic producers and conventional producers or both. There seems to be this mystery about compost including, what is actually in the compost and how much it is worth? Certainly, there is some mystery since composts do have organic matter and as a result also contain microbes that generally are not measured by the labs. These two ingredients add a lot of value to a compost but in general we have trouble quantifying or putting a $$ value on their presence in the compost.

Almost any company that makes and/or sells a compost product will have an analysis for you to know what is in their product. Typically, they should be taking samples on a regular basis or at least as the supply source changes. Compost is generally made from manure, and manure is made from feed that livestock eat. As a livestock producer changes what their animals eat this can drastically influence what nutrients end up in the manure and ultimately the compost.

The chart below shows some comparisons between different manures or composts with prices. These prices were collected on January 14, 2026, and so your current prices may be different. The chicken manure can be seen as a bargain compared to the pellets, but the pellets have some advantages in ease of application and uniformity of product.

Just click on the spreadsheet above and you can look at the entire sheet much larger!

What we really want is an analysis based on dry matter not with water added so we can compare to commercial fertilizer costs. This gives us a compost value or even a way to compare one compost to another.

I did this analysis above on three different products. One was a manure product that had been composted or dry down to remove some water but not all, and the other two were pelleted compost products which is very common now. To do the calculations the compost or manures typically are expressed on an “as is basis”, so I multiply the ton or 2,000 lbs. times the %nutrient. In the first example there is 3.0% nitrogen X 2,000 lbs. = 60 lbs. of nitrogen. Nitrogen is also in a phosphorus source (18-46-0) so I have to subtract that out to get a value for the nitrogen in the chicken manure based on nutrients I can buy from commercial fertilizer. I do this for all the manure nutrients to establish a value for nutrients.

This picture of my spreadsheet above shows an analysis of the cost of ingredients based solely on Nitrogen, Phosphorus from P2O5, Potassium from K2O and Sulphur from 90% Sulphur. You can see the current cost of those nutrients is based on commercial fertilizer prices so that we get a value to compare composts to each other. In the top example, the $43 chicken manure compost seems to be a bargain, and the nutrients are comparable to the other examples. The water though is a problem for trying to use this product. It won’t spread easily, and you are hauling a lot of water. This example is meant to show that you could pay about $43 per ton for the top example and feel good that you made money at the current price of conventional fertilizer. And, in the second example when you pay $145 and you are getting you are getting $157 in nutrients based on commercial fertilizer, and you get lots of micronutrients, organic matter and microbes. In the third example you may be asking why would I buy that product? First, you are not hauling water; second the product may be very easy to spread based on its high dry matter; third, maybe they stand behind the product as a fertilizer not just a manure.

The point is to do a little comparison shopping before you just look at price per ton, there are a lot of things in the ton you may have never thought about before! Lastly, the benefits of the carbon in compost, which is the food source for microbes add tremendous value. In one sample I was sent it was 23% carbon, and you will not get that from commercial fertilizer!

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Author: Bob Whitney

Extension Organic Program Specialist, Texas A&M AgriLife Extension

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