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Chelated Zinc EDTA Fertilizer

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Weight: 1 Pound

Greenway Biotech · Made in California since 1989

Chelated Zinc EDTA, 14% Zinc.
Zinc that stays available.

A professional-grade chelated zinc micronutrient for growers fighting zinc deficiency in alkaline and calcareous soils. The EDTA chelate keeps zinc plant-available through roughly pH 7.0 - well past the point where zinc sulfate locks up - so it works for soil, foliar, fertigation, and hydroponic feeding. CDFA registered and third-party lab tested for heavy metals.

Find your size → Calculate how much I need

14%

Chelated zinc by weight, as a stable EDTA complex

7.0pH

Stays plant-available up to roughly pH 7.0

300+

Enzyme systems that depend on zinc as a cofactor

100%

Water soluble for drip, foliar, and hydroponic use

01 / Choose your size

Right-sized for the job.

Because chelated zinc is used at low rates, a little goes a long way. Coverage figures below are planning estimates for a banded field-crop rate of roughly 5 lbs of product per acre; foliar, garden, and hydroponic use will stretch each bag much further. Confirm your own rate with a soil test.

Chelated Zinc EDTA coverage by bag size at a banded field-crop planning rate of about 5 lbs per acre
Bag Size Banded Field Crop Garden Beds (approx.) Best For
1 lb Spot use / trials ~4,500 sq ft Home gardeners
2 lb Small banded plot ~9,000 sq ft Raised beds, trials
5 lb ~1 acre banded Large gardens Most popular
10 lb ~2 acres banded Small orchards Hobby farms
25 lb ~5 acres banded Commercial blocks Best value
02 / Ideal applications

One bag.
Many growing methods.

Chelated Zinc EDTA suits any system where zinc needs to stay dissolved and available - especially alkaline soils, high-pH irrigation water, and soilless culture. It is most useful where zinc sulfate has given disappointing results.

Corn & Field Grains

Corn is among the most zinc-responsive field crops. A low banded starter rate places zinc near developing roots during early growth stages when demand is highest.

Citrus & Tree Crops

Pecans, citrus, and stone fruit are prone to zinc deficiency on high-pH soils. Fertigated zinc EDTA can raise leaf zinc steadily over the season.

Vegetable Crops

Useful for correcting zinc deficiency in beans, sweet corn, and other garden vegetables. Apply at or before planting and confirm need with a soil test first.

Hydroponics & Fertigation

Fully water soluble and stable in solution. Always dose with the stock-solution method - the zinc requirement is very small and easy to overshoot.

Foliar Correction

When deficiency symptoms appear on new growth, a dilute foliar spray is the fastest way to get zinc into the plant. Keep rates well below soil rates.

Calcareous & High-pH Soils

This is where chelation earns its keep. On alkaline or calcareous ground where zinc sulfate ties up quickly, the EDTA chelate keeps zinc in solution.

03 / Why chelated zinc EDTA

Zinc that resists
soil lock-up.

Zinc is one of the most commonly deficient micronutrients in high-pH soils. The form you choose decides how much of it the plant actually gets.

7.0pH

Stays available in alkaline soil.

The EDTA ligand wraps zinc in a stable ring structure that resists reaction with soil carbonates and phosphates. Zinc sulfate begins losing availability above roughly pH 5.5; chelated zinc EDTA remains plant-available up to about pH 7.0 - the range covering most agricultural soils. For high-pH alternatives in iron correction, see Chelated Iron DTPA 11%.

100%

Fully water soluble.

Dissolves completely for drip irrigation, foliar sprayers, fertigation, and hydroponic reservoirs - with no insoluble residue to clog lines or emitters. That solubility is what makes precise, low-rate dosing practical.

Lowrate

Lower application rates on problem soils.

Because chelated zinc is not lost to soil fixation as readily as sulfate forms, lower rates can achieve the same correction - especially valuable in calcareous and high-pH soils. University research notes the availability of chelated zinc can be at least double that of zinc sulfate, though it typically costs more per pound.

300+

Supports core plant enzyme systems.

Zinc is a required cofactor for hundreds of enzyme systems that govern protein synthesis, carbohydrate metabolism, and growth-hormone (auxin) regulation. Adequate zinc supports normal internode elongation and leaf expansion - which is why deficiency shows as stunted, clustered new growth.

CDFA

Registered and lab tested.

Manufactured in Madera, California and registered with the California Department of Food and Agriculture. Every batch is tested for heavy metals, with results consistently well below required limits. Browse the full chelated micronutrient collection to build a complete program.

04 / The science

Why chelation keeps zinc in solution.

14% Zn

Zinc ethylenediaminetetraacetate (Zn-EDTA)

Zinc is an essential micronutrient: a structural and catalytic component of enzymes involved in protein synthesis, carbohydrate metabolism, and the production of auxin, the growth hormone that drives shoot elongation. Because zinc is immobile in the plant, it cannot move from old tissue to new - so deficiency always appears on the youngest growth first, as interveinal yellowing, small "little leaf," and shortened internodes that cluster leaves into a rosette.

The problem in most soils is not total zinc but available zinc. Above roughly pH 6.0, zinc availability falls sharply as zinc ions react with carbonates, phosphates, and hydroxides to form compounds roots cannot absorb. Zinc sulfate, an ionic salt, is exposed to those reactions directly. EDTA chelation changes that: the EDTA molecule binds the zinc ion at multiple points, forming a stable ring complex that shields it from soil reactions while still releasing it for root and leaf uptake.

The practical result is a wider working pH range. Where zinc sulfate is most effective in acidic to neutral soils, chelated zinc EDTA holds zinc available into the neutral-to-slightly-alkaline range common across the American West and any region with limestone-influenced or alkaline irrigation water. In hydroponics and fertigation, that same stability prevents zinc from dropping out of concentrated nutrient solutions.

For a deeper comparison of the two forms, see Sulfate vs. Chelated Fertilizers: Key Differences Explained, and for zinc's role in plant health, What's the Function of Zinc in Plants?

05 / Application rates

Pick your use.
Get your rate.

Nearly all research-based zinc recommendations are stated as actual (elemental) zinc per acre. Because this product is 14% zinc, convert with: product (lb) = actual Zn (lb) ÷ 0.14 - roughly 7.1 lbs of product per 1 lb of actual zinc. The calculator below does this for you.

Field Crops - Soil Application

Quick answer: For corn and other field crops, a banded starter supplying about 0.5-1 lb of actual zinc per acre (roughly 3.6-7.1 lbs of this 14% product) is the standard correction rate.

Field crop soil rates for 14% zinc chelate, stated as actual Zn and as 14% product
Method / Crop Actual Zn Rate 14% Product Rate Source Notes
Band / starter (with planter) 0.5-1.0 lb Zn/acre ~3.6-7.1 lb/acre UW-Madison Extension A2528 Band placement near the seed is the most efficient method
Broadcast (medium soils) 1.0-2.0 lb Zn/acre ~7.1-14.3 lb/acre UW-Madison Extension A2528 Incorporate before planting; builds soil zinc over time
Grain sorghum - banded starter ~0.25-0.5 lb Zn/acre ~1.8-3.6 lb/acre NC State Extension agronomy Banded chelate is efficient; rates can be reduced versus other sources

📋 Soil Test First: Field crop application rates above are general guidelines based on typical soil test levels and crop removal estimates. A response to zinc is likely when the DTPA-extractable zinc soil test is roughly 0.5 ppm or lower. Actual rates should be confirmed by a current soil test and consultation with your local cooperative extension service, as needs vary significantly by soil type, crop variety, and regional conditions.

Sources: University of Wisconsin-Madison Extension, "Soil and Applied Zinc" (A2528); University of Minnesota Extension; North Carolina State University Extension.

Foliar Application

Quick answer: For field crops, a foliar spray supplying about 0.15 lb of actual zinc per acre (roughly 1.1 lbs of this 14% product) in about 20 gallons of water per acre is a typical corrective rate.

Foliar zinc rates for 14% zinc chelate, stated as actual Zn and as 14% product
Crop / Context Actual Zn Rate 14% Product Rate Source Notes
Corn (standard) ~0.15 lb Zn/acre ~1.1 lb/acre UMN Extension; Pioneer agronomy Apply in ~20 gal water/acre; high water volume reduces burn risk
Corn (range) 0.10-0.25 lb Zn/acre ~0.7-1.8 lb/acre LSU AgCenter In ~20 gal water/acre; repeat in 10-14 days if needed
Citrus / tree foliar 0.3-0.4% solution ~3-4 lb product/100 gal Citrus extension foliar guidance Apply just before flowering; avoid spraying open bloom

Foliar safety check: Foliar rates are intentionally well below soil rates. Mix only as directed, always test on a small area first, spray in early morning or late afternoon, and avoid spraying in temperatures above 85°F. With chelated zinc in particular, over-application can cause foliar injury while under-application is ineffective - measure carefully.

Sources: University of Minnesota Extension; LSU AgCenter; Ohio State University Extension; citrus cooperative extension foliar scheduling guidance.

Trees & Vines - Fertigated Soil Application

Quick answer: For tree crops on high-pH soil, fertigating about 2-4 lb of actual zinc per acre per year (roughly 14-29 lbs of this 14% product) raises leaf zinc steadily over the season.

Tree and vine fertigated zinc rates, stated as actual Zn and as 14% product
Crop / Context Actual Zn Rate 14% Product Rate Source Notes
Pecan - fertigated, alkaline soil 2-4 lb Zn/acre/yr ~14-29 lb/acre/yr U. of Arizona (Walworth & Heerema) Applied through irrigation; leaf zinc rose with rate in field trials
Citrus - fertigated through drip Split over season Place 50-75% in early spring Citrus extension scheduling guidance Builds soil zinc reserve before peak growth; pair with foliar before flowering
Young / fast-growing trees General guidance Apply to new growth in spring Greenway Biotech product guidance Distribute under the drip line at several points; water in thoroughly

📋 Soil & Tissue Test First: Tree-crop rates above are general guidelines. Zinc is a heavy metal that accumulates in soil, so apply only what a deficiency warrants. Confirm need with a current soil test and, where possible, leaf-tissue analysis, and consult your local cooperative extension service.

Sources: University of Arizona pecan research (Walworth & Heerema, ISHS Acta Horticulturae); citrus cooperative extension scheduling guidance; Greenway Biotech product guidance.

Hydroponics & Fertigation Reservoirs

Quick answer: Target about 0.05 ppm zinc in the final nutrient solution - the long-standing Hoagland & Arnon research baseline - with a typical working range of 0.05-0.13 ppm. Always dose with the stock-solution method; never add powder directly.

Hydroponic zinc solution targets from standard research formulations
Target Zn in Solution Source Notes
Standard baseline (most crops) ~0.05 ppm Zn Hoagland & Arnon formulation The universal research reference solution; 1 ppm = 1 mg/L
Hydroponic tomato standard ~0.09 ppm Zn Published hydroponic tomato standards Fruiting crops are dosed slightly higher than the baseline
Typical working range 0.05-0.13 ppm Zn Range across published formulations Subtract any zinc already present in your source water

Stock solution method: The zinc requirement in a reservoir is tiny - roughly 0.36 g of this 14% product per 1,000 litres at the 0.05 ppm baseline - far too small to weigh accurately. Dissolve a weighable amount instead: about 10 g of product in 1 litre of water makes a concentrated stock, then dose roughly 36 mL of that stock per 1,000 litres of final solution to reach 0.05 ppm. The calculator on this page does this conversion for your reservoir size. Always verify the result with a ppm meter.

Accuracy matters both ways: standard feed targets (0.05-0.13 ppm) sit roughly two orders of magnitude below the approximately 20 ppm concentration where research has observed zinc toxicity in solution - so under-dosing at these small masses is just as easy as over-dosing. Maintain solution pH between 5.5 and 6.0, which supports both nutrient uptake and EDTA chelate stability, and replace the nutrient solution every two to three weeks.

Sources: Hoagland & Arnon nutrient solution formulation; published hydroponic tomato nutrient standards; Penn State Extension and University of Illinois Extension hydroponic guidance. The conversion from target ppm to grams of 14% zinc product is derived from formulation chemistry; the ppm targets and the toxicity figure are drawn directly from the cited research.

06 / How to use & calculate

Test.
Measure.
Apply.

Zinc is immobile in plants, so deficiency always shows on new growth first - apply when early symptoms appear for the fastest correction. The calculator turns research-based zinc rates into pounds of product for your situation.

  1. 01

    Soil test before you apply

    Confirm the deficiency with a soil test. A response to zinc is likely when DTPA-extractable zinc is roughly 0.5 ppm or lower. Testing first avoids compounding existing zinc and wasting product.

  2. 02

    Choose soil or foliar

    For annual crops, band a low rate near the seed at planting. For perennials, apply to the root zone in early spring. When symptoms are already visible, a dilute foliar spray gives the fastest response.

  3. 03

    In hydroponics, use a stock solution

    Dissolve about 10 g of product in 1 litre of water to make a concentrated stock, then add that stock by the millilitre to your reservoir - roughly 36 mL per 1,000 litres reaches the 0.05 ppm baseline. Verify the final concentration with a ppm meter and keep zinc within the 0.05-0.13 ppm working range.

  4. 04

    Water in and watch new growth

    Water soil applications in thoroughly. Existing affected leaves will not recover - judge success by healthy new growth over the following two to four weeks.

07 / Compare

Zinc sources.
Different jobs.

Chelated zinc EDTA is not the only way to supply zinc - it is the right way for high-pH soils and soilless systems. For a full breakdown of the two families, see Sulfate vs. Chelated Fertilizers.

Chelated Zinc EDTA compared with zinc sulfate and other chelated micronutrients
Product Nutrient Effective pH Range Best For Notes
Chelated Zinc EDTA (this product) 14% Zn Up to ~7.0 Alkaline soils, fertigation, hydroponics Stays soluble where sulfate ties up; low rates; higher cost per lb
Zinc Sulfate 35.5% 35.5% Zn, 16.5% S ~4.5-6.5 Acidic to neutral soils; sulfur supply High zinc concentration, lower cost; locks up above pH 5.5-6.5
Chelated Iron EDTA 13% 13% Fe ~4.0-7.0 Iron chlorosis in moderate-pH soils Iron deficiency often co-occurs with zinc deficiency in alkaline soil
Chelated Manganese EDTA Mn as EDTA chelate Up to ~7.0 Manganese deficiency in calcareous soils Manganese and zinc deficiencies frequently appear together
Chelated Copper EDTA 14% 14% Cu ~4.0-9.0 Copper deficiency in sandy, organic soils Completes a four-element chelated micronutrient program
08 / Decision

Is this the right
zinc source for you?

Chelated zinc EDTA is the practical choice for most high-pH situations, but it is not always the most economical option. Here is how to decide.

Best Choice For

  • Soils between roughly pH 5.5 and 7.0, especially where zinc sulfate has given poor results
  • Calcareous, sandy, or low-organic-matter soils prone to zinc tie-up
  • Foliar correction on tree crops and high-value vegetables
  • Drip fertigation and hydroponic systems needing precise, soluble zinc
  • Alkaline irrigation water that would precipitate ionic zinc salts
  • Growers who want a single product that works across soil, foliar, and hydroponic methods

Consider Another Product If

10 / Safety & handling

Read this before
you apply.

Chelated Zinc EDTA is a concentrated micronutrient. Handle it with the same care you would give any fine-powder fertilizer.

  • Wear chemical-resistant (nitrile) gloves and safety glasses when measuring or mixing; use a dust mask in poorly ventilated areas, and wash hands and exposed skin after handling.
  • Store in the original sealed container in a cool, dry place away from heat and sunlight. This product is hygroscopic - reseal tightly after every use to prevent caking. Keep out of reach of children and pets, and away from food, feed, and potable water.
  • Do not exceed recommended rates - zinc is toxic to plants at elevated levels and accumulates in soil. Avoid application during bloom on tree crops, and water soil applications in thoroughly.
  • In hydroponics, always use the stock-solution method - direct powder addition risks acute overdose. Jar-test before mixing with unfamiliar products, and avoid combining with concentrated phosphate fertilizers, which can precipitate the chelated metal.
  • First aid - eyes: flush with clean water for at least 15 minutes. Skin: wash with soap and water. Ingestion: do not induce vomiting; contact Poison Control at 1-800-222-1222. Inhalation: move to fresh air. Refer to the Safety Data Sheet for complete information and seek medical attention if symptoms persist.
11 / FAQ

Common questions.
Honest answers.

If your question isn't here, contact our team at questions@greenwaybiotech.com.

What are the signs of zinc deficiency in plants?

Zinc deficiency always appears on new growth first because zinc is immobile in plants - it cannot move from older leaves to support emerging tissue. Common symptoms include interveinal chlorosis (yellowing between leaf veins on young leaves), small and narrow "little leaf" in trees, shortened internodes that cluster leaves into a rosette, bronze or necrotic spots (especially in beans), pale or white young leaves in corn, and delayed maturity with poor fruit or seed set. Deficiency is most common in soils above pH 7.0, sandy soils, high-phosphorus soils, and during cool, wet conditions. For more on zinc's role in the plant, see What's the Function of Zinc in Plants?

How does chelated zinc EDTA compare to zinc sulfate?

The two differ mainly in how they behave in soil. Zinc sulfate is inexpensive and effective in acidic to neutral soils, but above roughly pH 5.5 it begins reacting with phosphates and carbonates to form compounds that plants cannot absorb. Chelated zinc EDTA stays soluble and plant-available up to about pH 7.0, so it performs better in alkaline and calcareous soils, in fertigation, and in hydroponics. University research notes the availability of chelated zinc can be at least double that of zinc sulfate, though it typically costs more per pound. In acidic soils below pH 5.5, zinc sulfate is often sufficient and more economical. For a full comparison, see Sulfate vs. Chelated Fertilizers.

How much Chelated Zinc EDTA do I need per acre?

Research-based zinc rates are stated as actual (elemental) zinc per acre. Because this product is 14% zinc, convert with: product (lb) = actual Zn (lb) divided by 0.14. For a banded field-crop starter supplying 0.5 to 1 lb of actual zinc per acre, that works out to roughly 3.6 to 7.1 lbs of product per acre; a broadcast rate of 1 to 2 lb of actual zinc per acre is roughly 7.1 to 14.3 lbs of product. The calculator on this page does the conversion for you and recommends a bag size. Always confirm the underlying rate with a current soil test.

Can I use this product in hydroponics?

Yes - but always use the stock-solution method and never add the powder directly to a reservoir. The zinc requirement is extremely small - roughly 0.36 g of product per 1,000 litres of solution - so direct addition makes overdose nearly unavoidable. Dissolve about 10 g of product in 1 litre of water to make a concentrated stock, then add that stock by the millilitre to your reservoir (around 36 mL per 1,000 litres for the standard target) and verify the final concentration with a ppm meter. Aim for about 0.05 ppm zinc - the Hoagland research baseline - within a typical working range of 0.05 to 0.13 ppm. Maintain solution pH between 5.5 and 6.0, which supports both nutrient uptake and the stability of the EDTA chelate.

When is the best time to apply zinc fertilizer?

For annual crops, apply zinc at or before planting - banding a low rate near the seed row is the most efficient method. For perennial trees and vines, apply to the root zone in early spring before bud break. When deficiency symptoms are already visible, a dilute foliar spray gives the fastest response because zinc is absorbed directly through the leaves; soil applications take longer to reach deficient tissue. A single application generally lasts the growing season for annual crops, while perennials may benefit from annual applications.

Can zinc be toxic to plants? How do I avoid over-applying?

Zinc is beneficial at the right levels but can be toxic at elevated concentrations, particularly in sensitive crops such as beans and in hydroponic systems. Always soil test before applying, follow the rates on this page, and remember that zinc is a heavy metal that accumulates in soil - apply only what a deficiency warrants. In hydroponics, keep zinc within the typical working range of 0.05 to 0.13 ppm and start near the 0.05 ppm baseline; research has observed toxicity in solution only at far higher concentrations, around 20 ppm, so accuracy matters in both directions. Leaf-tissue testing is the most accurate way to monitor plant zinc; the optimal range for most crops is roughly 20 to 60 ppm in leaf tissue. For broader context, see our guide to Essential Micronutrients.

Which crops are most likely to need zinc supplementation?

Corn is among the most zinc-responsive field crops and often shows pale young leaves when deficient. Citrus, pecans, grapes, beans, rice, and sorghum are also commonly susceptible. Deficiency risk rises on sandy soils, soils above pH 7.0, recently limed or high-phosphorus soils, and in cold, wet conditions that slow root activity. Ground that has been graded or had its topsoil removed - common on new home sites - is also prone to zinc deficiency because surface zinc is lost in grading.

How soon will I see results after applying chelated zinc?

Foliar application delivers the fastest response, with improvement often visible in new growth within one to two weeks. Soil applications take longer - typically two to four weeks - but provide more sustained correction. Because zinc is immobile in the plant, existing affected leaves will not fully recover; judge success by the health of new growth. Results vary with soil temperature, moisture, application method, and the severity of the deficiency.

12 / Documents

Lab-tested.
State-registered.

Guaranteed analysis, safety, and handling documentation for Chelated Zinc EDTA. Contact us any time if you need a document that isn't listed here.

Ready to correct zinc deficiency?

Pick your bag. We'll ship it.

Chelated Zinc EDTA ships in 1, 2, 5, 10, and 25 lb sizes, with free shipping on orders over $100. Every order is backed by our 90-day money-back guarantee - if it isn't right for your soil, return the unused portion for a full refund.

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