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Potassium Chloride (Muriate of Potash) 0-0-62

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Greenway Biotech · Made in California since 1989

Potassium Chloride 0-0-62.
The economic backbone of broadacre potassium.

Also known as muriate of potash (MOP), Potassium Chloride 0-0-62 is one of the most concentrated and widely used dry potassium fertilizers in agriculture. CDFA registered, 100% water-soluble, and independently lab tested for heavy metals — built for chloride-tolerant field crops, lawns, turf, and broadacre fertility programs where low cost per unit of K₂O matters most.

Find your size → Calculate how much I need

62%

Soluble potash (K₂O) by weight — one of the most concentrated dry K sources available

100%

Water-soluble for fertigation, drip injection, and dissolved-feed programs

~47%

Chloride content — a benefit on chloride-tolerant crops, a constraint on sensitive ones

35+yrs

Family-owned California fertilizer manufacturing

01 / Choose your size

Right-sized for the job.

Coverage figures below assume typical reference rates: 1.5 lbs / 100 sq ft for gardens, 12.5 lbs / 1,000 sq ft / year for lawns, and 200 lbs / acre for field application. Actual rates should be set from a current soil test and yield-goal estimate. Use the calculator further down the page for crop- and area-specific math.

Potassium Chloride 0-0-62 coverage by bag size at typical reference rates
Bag Size Garden Coverage Lawn Coverage Field Coverage Best For
2 lb ~133 sq ft ~160 sq ft Trial / small bed
5 lb ~333 sq ft ~400 sq ft Home garden
25 lb ~1,667 sq ft ~2,000 sq ft ~0.1 acre Most popular
50 lb ~3,333 sq ft ~4,000 sq ft ~0.25 acre Best value
02 / Ideal applications

One bag.
Six different jobs.

Muriate of potash is the workhorse potassium source for chloride-tolerant systems. The same bag fits all six of these jobs — with the caveats noted where chloride sensitivity becomes a factor.

Field Crops

Corn, wheat, barley, soybeans, alfalfa, and cotton. Rate depends on soil test K level, expected yield, and crop K removal — see Application Rates below.

Lawns & Turf

10–15 lbs per 1,000 sq ft per year, split into 2–3 applications. Water in thoroughly to reduce surface salt injury and move K into the root zone.

Vegetable Gardens

1–2 lbs per 100 sq ft for chloride-tolerant crops. Avoid use on tomatoes, peppers, strawberries, potatoes, and grapes — choose a sulfate source instead.

Fertigation

2–3 lbs per 100 gallons injected weekly during active growth. Monitor EC; flush lines after each cycle to prevent salt buildup in emitters.

Trees & Shrubs

0.5–1 lb per inch of trunk diameter, broadcast at the drip line and watered in. Annual application; avoid for chloride-sensitive ornamentals.

Hydroponics

Use with caution and only in non-recirculating systems. Chloride accumulates over time; sulfate-based K sources are preferred for most hydroponic crops.

03 / Why muriate of potash

Most K per pound.
Most K per dollar.

When potassium is the goal and chloride is not a constraint, muriate of potash is the most efficient and economical way to deliver K₂O. Six reasons it dominates broadacre potassium programs worldwide.

62%

Highly concentrated potassium.

At 62% soluble potash (K₂O), potassium chloride is one of the most concentrated dry potassium fertilizers commercially available. High analysis means less product per unit of K₂O applied — an advantage for large acreage and high-demand crop programs.

$/K

Often the lowest-cost K₂O source.

Muriate of potash is often the lowest-cost source of K₂O for chloride-tolerant crops. Potassium sulfate typically costs more per unit of K₂O but is preferred where chloride sensitivity or sulfur needs matter — making KCl the economic default for broadacre field crops.

100%

Fully water-soluble.

Dissolves completely for properly managed soil application and fertigation programs. The high salt index means foliar and hydroponic applications require careful concentration management and are not appropriate for chloride-sensitive crops.

80+

Activates 80+ plant enzymes.

Potassium activates more than 80 enzymes involved in protein synthesis, starch formation, ATP production, and phloem loading. No other macronutrient activates as many enzymatic processes — making adequate K central to yield, fruit quality, and stress tolerance.

Cl

Chloride: a benefit for grain crops.

Research in wheat, barley, and corn has associated chloride application with reduced severity of common root and foliar diseases, and may improve nitrogen use efficiency by slowing nitrification — potentially contributing yield benefits alongside the potassium effect, though responses vary by soil type, pathogen pressure, and crop.

CDFA

Registered & lab tested.

CDFA registered and consistent with standard agronomic recommendations for chloride-tolerant crops. Independently lab tested for heavy metal content — results consistently well below required limits. Agricultural-grade crystalline KCl refined for consistent solubility.

04 / The science

Why potassium is the quality nutrient.

K₂O   62%

Potassium Chloride — KCl — CAS 7447-40-7

Potassium is involved in more plant physiological processes than any mineral nutrient except nitrogen. As the most abundant cation inside plant cells, K⁺ governs enzyme activation, phloem loading, stomatal regulation, and osmotic potential — functions that directly affect yield, quality, and stress tolerance. Unlike nitrogen, potassium is not a structural component of the plant; it works as an ionic regulator that opens and closes gates, activates enzymes, and keeps water and sugars moving through the vascular system.

Potassium chloride contains zero nitrogen and zero phosphorus — it is a single-nutrient fertilizer designed to address potassium deficiency directly without altering N or P ratios. At 62% K₂O, it is among the most concentrated potassium fertilizers commercially available and one of the most widely used potassium sources in broadacre agriculture worldwide. The chloride counter-ion (~47% by weight) is an essential plant micronutrient required for the water-splitting reaction in photosystem II and for charge balance in cellular compartments — though most soils supply adequate Cl naturally, and accumulation is a concern in sensitive crops.

The practical implication for growers: if you are running a chloride-tolerant program — corn, wheat, barley, soybeans, alfalfa, cotton, sugar beets, or turfgrass — muriate of potash delivers more K₂O per pound and typically per dollar than any other commercial K source. If you are growing chloride-sensitive crops or running a recirculating hydroponic system, the chloride load becomes a constraint and a sulfate-based source is the better fit.

For a deeper look at potassium’s role in plant biology, see our guide on What is the Function of Potassium (K) in Plants? For a side-by-side of potassium sources, see What is the Best Potassium Fertilizer?

05 / Application rates

Pick your use.
Get your rate.

Application rates by use case. Chloride-tolerant crops only — see the Decision Split section below for crops that should use a sulfate-based source instead. All rates should be confirmed against a current soil test.

Field Crops — Broadcast Application

Quick answer: For corn at 200 bu/acre, ~266 lbs KCl/acre (delivers ~165 lbs K₂O). Adjust to your soil test K level and yield goal.

📋 Field & Acreage Rates: The per-acre figures below are general references for medium-testing soils at typical yield goals. Actual rates should be based on a current soil test and local nutrient removal estimates. Consult your local extension service for site-specific recommendations.

Field crop potassium chloride reference rates
Crop Typical K₂O Removal Approx. KCl Needed Timing Notes
Alfalfa 50–60 lbs K₂O per ton DM ~80–100 lbs KCl per ton DM Apply per ton of dry matter harvested. Split heavy seasonal rates (above 300 lbs K₂O/acre) between early spring and after the second cutting to limit luxury consumption.
Corn (200 bu/acre) ~165 lbs K₂O ~266 lbs KCl Pre-plant broadcast or split with side-dress
Cotton Highly variable by yield goal Consult local extension Split applications strongly recommended
Peanuts Highly variable by yield goal Consult local extension Soil test essential; apply at pegging stage (beginning of pod development)
Soybeans (50 bu/acre) ~58 lbs K₂O ~95 lbs KCl Pre-plant broadcast. Do not apply within 2 weeks of planting on silt loam or heavier soils — allow rain to leach chloride from the seed zone.
Wheat / Barley ~65–100 lbs K₂O ~105–160 lbs KCl Fall or early spring; based on soil test

Garden & Lawn Applications

Quick answer: 1.5 lbs per 100 sq ft for chloride-tolerant garden crops; 10–15 lbs per 1,000 sq ft per year for lawns, split into 2–3 applications.

Garden and lawn potassium chloride application rates
Application Rate Frequency
Vegetable gardens (chloride-tolerant crops) 1–2 lbs per 100 sq ft Pre-plant + mid-season
Lawns & turf 10–15 lbs per 1,000 sq ft / year Split into 2–3 applications
Ornamental beds 1–1.5 lbs per 100 sq ft Spring + fall
Trees & shrubs 0.5–1 lb per inch of trunk diameter Annual; apply at drip line

⚠️ Chloride-sensitive crops: Tomatoes, peppers, potatoes, strawberries and other berries, grapes, tobacco, citrus, and acid-loving ornamentals (azaleas, rhododendrons) may perform better with Potassium Sulfate 0-0-53. Sensitivity varies by crop, cultivar, irrigation water quality, and soil drainage.

Fertigation & Drip Injection

Quick answer: 2–3 lbs KCl per 100 gallons of working solution, injected weekly during active growth.

Fertigation potassium chloride concentration guidelines
Stage Concentration Notes
Light feed 1.5 lbs / 100 gal Early growth or low-K-demand crops
Standard 2.5 lbs / 100 gal Most chloride-tolerant crops during active growth
Heavy feed 3.0 lbs / 100 gal High-K-demand crops at fruiting / heading
Stock solution (for fertigation only) 3 lbs / gallon Dilute 1:100 before injection. Not for hydroponic formulations.

Compatibility: Use separate stock tanks for calcium fertilizers and other concentrated salts whenever possible. Always dilute each independently before combining in the main tank, and jar-test unfamiliar combinations before injecting. Flush lines after each injection cycle to prevent salt buildup in emitters.

Foliar Application — Use with Caution

Quick answer: KCl is not the preferred foliar K source. If foliar use is unavoidable, keep the rate at or below 2 lbs per 100 gallons and test on a small area first.

⚠️ Foliar safety check: Potassium chloride has a very high salt index (~116) and is not generally recommended for foliar use. Soil broadcast or fertigation is safer and more reliable for most growers. If foliar application is unavoidable — for example, as an emergency correction on a confirmed K-deficient field crop — use no more than 1–2 lbs per 100 gallons, apply in early morning or late afternoon below 85°F, and test on a small section of foliage first. Wait 48 hours before treating the full crop. Do not apply to drought-stressed plants or any crop with known chloride sensitivity.

For routine foliar K, use Potassium Sulfate 0-0-53 instead — chloride-free and significantly lower salt index.

Hydroponics — Use with Caution

Quick answer: Not preferred for recirculating hydroponics. Chloride accumulates over time and the high salt index complicates EC management.

⚠️ Hydroponic warning: Potassium chloride is generally not the preferred potassium source for recirculating hydroponic systems. Chloride accumulates with each reservoir cycle and can reach phytotoxic levels, and the high salt index makes EC management challenging. For most hydroponic crops, Potassium Sulfate 0-0-53 or MKP 0-52-34 are more suitable potassium sources.

If KCl must be used in a controlled formulation: open or drain-to-waste systems only, monitor EC and solution chloride at every reservoir change, and never use on chloride-sensitive crops (tomatoes, peppers, lettuce, strawberries, cucumbers).

06 / How to use & calculate

Soil test.
Broadcast.
Water in.

Four steps from bag to root zone — with the calculator on the right doing the math for your specific area, crop, or tank volume.

  1. 01

    Confirm chloride tolerance first.

    Check your crop or grass variety against the chloride-sensitive list before applying. For tomatoes, peppers, strawberries, potatoes, grapes, citrus, or tobacco, switch to Potassium Sulfate 0-0-53 — chloride-free and significantly lower salt index.

  2. 02

    Soil test before applying.

    Over-application increases soil salinity and can reduce yields. Confirm potassium deficiency before applying, and re-test every 2–3 years on lawns and home gardens, annually on production fields.

  3. 03

    Broadcast and incorporate.

    Spread granules evenly using a spreader or by hand for small areas. Incorporate into the top 2–4 inches of soil with a rake or tiller to reduce salt concentration near the surface. Water thoroughly after application to move K into the root zone.

  4. 04

    Split heavy rates & band for corn no-till.

    For high-rate applications (cotton, peanuts, heavy turf, alfalfa above 300 lbs K₂O/acre), split the total into 2–3 applications spaced 3–4 weeks apart. For corn in ridge-till or no-till systems, banded application of 40–50 lbs K₂O per acre (~65–83 lbs KCl) placed 2 inches to the side and 2 inches below the seed is recommended even on high-testing soils (UMN Extension). In fertigation programs, dissolve completely before adding to the injection tank and use separate stock tanks for calcium fertilizers.

07 / Compare

Four potassium sources.
Different jobs.

Muriate of potash earns its place as the broadacre K workhorse. The table shows where each potassium source fits — chloride, sulfur, magnesium, and phosphate all play a role in choosing the right one. For deeper coverage, see What is the Best Potassium Fertilizer?

Potassium Chloride 0-0-62 compared with other potassium fertilizers
Product K₂O Co-nutrients Chloride Best For
Potassium Chloride 0-0-62 (this product) 62% None ~47% Chloride-tolerant field crops, lawns, turf — lowest cost per unit K₂O
Potassium Sulfate 0-0-53 53% 17% S None Chloride-sensitive crops, hydroponics, premium fruit, foliar
K-Mag 0-0-22 (langbeinite) 22% 11% Mg, 22% S <2.5% K + Mg + S in one product; soil application
MKP 0-52-34 34% 52% P₂O₅ None Bloom-stage feeding where both P and K are needed
08 / Decision

Is muriate of potash
the right K source for you?

A short checklist either confirms the fit or points you to a better-suited alternative.

Best Choice For

  • Chloride-tolerant field crops: corn, wheat, barley, alfalfa, cotton, sugar beets, turfgrass (and soybeans with proper application timing — see Application Rates)
  • Cost-effective potassium for large acreage or high-rate programs where chloride is not a concern
  • Soil-test confirmed potassium deficiency with chloride levels not already elevated
  • Blended dry fertilizer programs needing a concentrated K source
  • Grain crop programs where chloride suppression of root and foliar diseases is a management goal
  • Established lawns and pastures with verified low soil-K readings

Consider Another Product If

  • Growing chloride-sensitive crops (tobacco, potatoes, berries, grapes, tomatoes, peppers) — use Potassium Sulfate 0-0-53 instead
  • Soil already has elevated chloride from prior KCl applications or irrigation water — test before reapplying
  • Need K + sulfur in one product on sulfur-deficient soils — use Potassium Sulfate or K-Mag 0-0-22
  • Need K + magnesium in one application — use K-Mag 0-0-22
  • Growing premium fruit or vegetables where chloride could reduce sugar content or marketable quality
  • Running a recirculating hydroponic system — use Potassium Sulfate 0-0-53 or MKP 0-52-34 instead
10 / Safety & handling

Read this before
you apply.

Potassium chloride is not classified as hazardous under OSHA HazCom 2012, but the high salt index and hygroscopic nature warrant proper handling. Refer to the SDS for complete safety information.

  • PPE: Wear chemical-resistant gloves and safety glasses or goggles. Use a NIOSH-approved N95 dust mask when working with dry product in enclosed spaces or windy conditions. Long sleeves and closed-toe shoes recommended for bulk handling.
  • Storage: Cool, dry, well-ventilated area in original sealed containers. KCl is hygroscopic — moisture causes caking; reseal bags promptly. Keep below 104°F (40°C), away from direct sunlight, strong oxidizers, and concentrated acids. Out of reach of children and pets.
  • Application: High salt index (~116) — avoid direct seed contact and keep away from plant stems and crowns. Do not apply to dry foliage or in temperatures above 85°F. Water in thoroughly after broadcast. Avoid applying before heavy rainfall on sandy soils to prevent leaching.
  • Compatibility: Do not mix concentrated KCl stock solution directly with concentrated calcium nitrate — dilute each separately before combining in the main fertigation tank. Jar-test unfamiliar tank mixes before injecting. Flush lines after each injection cycle.
  • First aid: Eye contact — flush with clean water for at least 15 minutes; seek medical attention if irritation persists. Skin — wash thoroughly with soap and water. Ingestion — rinse mouth, do not induce vomiting, contact Poison Control (1-800-222-1222) for large amounts. Inhalation — move to fresh air.
11 / FAQ

Common questions.
Honest answers.

If your question isn’t here, contact our team at questions@greenwaybiotech.com or (562) 351-5168, Mon–Fri 7AM–5PM PST.

What is potassium chloride (muriate of potash) and how is it different from other potassium fertilizers?

Potassium chloride (KCl) is one of the most concentrated and widely used potassium fertilizers in the world, containing 62% K₂O. Its key distinction from other potassium sources is that it contains approximately 47% chloride alongside potassium. Potassium sulfate (0-0-53) supplies potassium with sulfur and no chloride — preferred for chloride-sensitive crops. K-Mag (0-0-22) supplies potassium, magnesium, and sulfur without chloride. Muriate of potash is often the lowest-cost option per unit of K₂O, making it the dominant choice for chloride-tolerant field crops on large acreage.

Which crops should NOT receive potassium chloride?

Crops that are sensitive to elevated chloride levels include tobacco (reduces leaf quality), potatoes (can lower specific gravity and cause internal blackening), strawberries and raspberries (may reduce sugar content), grapes (can affect wine quality), tomatoes and peppers (quality and flavor impacts), citrus (leaf burn risk), and acid-loving ornamentals like azaleas and rhododendrons. For any of these crops, use Potassium Sulfate 0-0-53 or K-Mag 0-0-22 as chloride-free alternatives. Sensitivity varies by crop, cultivar, irrigation water quality, and soil drainage — a soil chloride test can help determine whether accumulation is already a concern.

What is the function of potassium in plants — why does it matter so much?

Potassium is involved in more plant physiological processes than any mineral nutrient except nitrogen. It activates over 80 plant enzymes, regulates stomatal opening and closing (which controls water use and CO₂ intake), drives sugar loading into the phloem for transport to fruits and roots, and strengthens cell walls against disease and physical stress. Potassium deficiency typically shows as scorching or browning along leaf margins, reduced fruit size, and increased susceptibility to drought and disease. For a deeper look at potassium’s role in plant health, see our article: What is the Function of Potassium (K) in Plants?

Can I mix potassium chloride with calcium nitrate in a fertigation system?

Yes, with care. Use separate stock tanks for calcium fertilizers and other concentrated fertilizer salts whenever possible. Always dilute each independently before combining in your main fertigation tank, and jar-test unfamiliar tank mixes before injecting. At working concentrations (2–3 lbs KCl per 100 gallons), the two are widely used together in greenhouse and drip irrigation programs — but concentrated stock solutions should never be mixed directly.

How does chloride in muriate of potash affect soil and crop health?

Chloride is actually an essential plant micronutrient — required in small amounts for the water-splitting step in photosynthesis and for osmotic regulation. In grain crops like wheat and barley, chloride application has been associated in research with reduced severity of common root rot, take-all disease, and stripe rust, sometimes contributing yield benefits beyond what potassium alone would provide. The concern arises with sensitive crops or when chloride accumulates in soil through repeated high-rate KCl applications without adequate leaching. Sandy, high-rainfall soils rarely develop chloride problems; heavier soils with limited drainage or irrigation water already high in chloride deserve more attention. For more on how potassium and manganese interact in plant nutrition, see: What is the Role of Manganese and Potassium?

What is the salt index of potassium chloride, and why does it matter?

Potassium chloride has a salt index of approximately 116 (relative to sodium nitrate = 100), which is among the highest of any common potassium fertilizer. A high salt index means the product creates more osmotic pressure in the soil solution per unit weight, which can slow germination, reduce root growth, and cause foliar burn if applied at excessive rates or in direct contact with seeds, seedling roots, or foliage. Practical management: avoid seed-zone contact, split high rates into multiple applications, water in thoroughly after broadcast application, and keep foliar concentrations low — test on a small area first.

How does potassium chloride compare to potassium sulfate in cost and performance?

Muriate of potash is often the lowest-cost source of K₂O for chloride-tolerant crops. Potassium sulfate typically costs more per unit of K₂O but is preferred when the crop is chloride-sensitive, the soil is already high in chloride, sulfur is needed alongside potassium, or product quality is a primary concern (sugar crops, premium vegetables, tobacco). For mixed operations with both tolerant and sensitive crops, keeping both products on hand is the most flexible approach.

Can potassium chloride be used in hydroponics?

Generally, it is not the preferred K source for hydroponics — particularly recirculating systems. Chloride accumulates over time as the solution is recirculated and can reach phytotoxic levels, and the high salt index makes EC management more challenging. For most hydroponic crops, Potassium Sulfate 0-0-53 or MKP 0-52-34 are the better choices. If KCl must be used, restrict to open or drain-to-waste systems on chloride-tolerant crops only, and monitor solution chloride at every reservoir change.

How much potassium chloride do I need per acre of corn?

Corn at a 200 bu/acre yield goal typically removes about 165 lbs of K₂O per acre — which translates to roughly 266 lbs of KCl per acre (because KCl is 62% K₂O: 165 ÷ 0.62 ≈ 266). Actual rates depend on soil test K level, expected yield, and field history. Use the calculator above for your specific acreage and crop, and always confirm with a current soil test. For corn specifically, consider banding 50–60% of the seasonal rate 2 inches to the side and 2 inches below the seed at planting, with the balance pre-plant broadcast.

How should I time potassium chloride applications for soybeans?

Soybeans are more chloride-sensitive than corn or wheat, so timing matters. Purdue and University of Minnesota Extension recommend not applying potash within 2 weeks of planting on silt loam or heavier-textured soils — you want at least an inch or two of percolating rainfall to move chloride out of the seed zone before germination. Limit pre-plant potash directly ahead of soybeans to about 100 lbs of muriate of potash per acre when soil tests show medium or higher K levels. For a 60 bu/acre maintenance program, ~115 lbs KCl per acre supplies the K₂O removed by the crop. Soybeans can tolerate KCl when timing and rate are managed; problems appear when high chloride loads contact germinating seeds.

I grow potatoes — can I use any potassium chloride at all?

Potatoes are genuinely chloride-sensitive: research from the University of Minnesota and OSU Extension shows KCl can lower tuber specific gravity compared to potassium sulfate. For most potato programs, Potassium Sulfate 0-0-53 is the safer choice. However, when potassium demand is very high (300+ lbs K/acre), Extension guidance is to split the program — apply roughly half as potassium sulfate and half as potassium chloride. This can deliver the K the crop needs while keeping the chloride load below the threshold that damages specific gravity. As always, confirm with a current soil test and your local extension service.

Is potassium chloride safe to handle?

Potassium chloride is not classified as hazardous under OSHA HazCom 2012, but standard handling precautions apply. Wear chemical-resistant gloves and safety glasses, use a dust mask when working with dry product in enclosed spaces, and wash hands thoroughly after handling. Store sealed in a cool, dry place — KCl is hygroscopic and will cake if exposed to humid air. Keep out of reach of children and pets. For complete safety information, see the Safety Data Sheet (SDS).

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