You read the back of the fertilizer bag at the garden center. Nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, micronutrients, $32 for a 25-lb bag. You did the math on a 1,000 sqft garden and that bag will not even cover one application. The neighbor on the regenerative farming Instagram says she has not bought fertilizer in five years. Crimson clover, winter rye, buckwheat, hairy vetch. Free, the seed is cheap, and the soil gets better every year.
This guide explains exactly how that works. What a green manure crop actually is, the specific legumes and non-legumes that pay back the most, the nitrogen numbers, when to sow and when to terminate, the cost per square foot in 2026, the common mistakes that turn a green manure into a weed problem, and the published yield data showing that vegetables grown after a good green manure rotation typically outproduce vegetables grown in straight fallow ground.
A green manure crop is a plant grown specifically to be chopped down or tilled into the soil before it sets seed, releasing nutrients and organic matter for the next crop. It is a subset of cover crops. All green manures are cover crops, but not all cover crops are green manures (some are grown for grazing or seed harvest).
According to Cornell Cooperative Extension's overview of cover crops, a well-managed green manure delivers four benefits in one planting: nitrogen (if legume), organic matter, weed suppression, and erosion control. The SARE (Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education) cover crops resource hub documents that the practice has been used since at least the Han Dynasty in China (200 BCE), refined by US Land Grant universities in the 19th century, and validated by hundreds of peer-reviewed agronomy trials since.
Legume plants (clovers, vetches, peas, beans) host Rhizobium bacteria in root nodules. The bacteria pull nitrogen out of the air (which is 78% N2) and convert it to plant-available forms. The plant feeds the bacteria sugars in exchange. When you chop the legume and leave it on the soil, that nitrogen becomes available to your next crop as the residue decomposes.
The numbers from Midwest Cover Crops Council data, USDA ARS Thapa et al. (2018) meta-analysis, and University of Hawaii green manure crop guide:
| Legume green manure | N fixed (lb / acre) | Best US zone |
| Hairy vetch | 90 to 200 | 3 to 9 (winter) |
| Crimson clover | 70 to 150 | 6 to 9 (winter), 3 to 5 (summer) |
| Cowpea | 80 to 200 | 4 to 11 (summer) |
| Austrian winter pea | 60 to 150 | 4 to 8 (winter) |
| Red clover | 70 to 150 | 3 to 7 |
| White / sub clover | 50 to 120 | 4 to 9 (perennial) |
| Sun hemp | 100 to 180 | 7 to 11 (summer) |
Source: USDA ARS (Thapa et al. 2018), Midwest Cover Crops Council, and U. Hawaii Green Manure Crops
Plant-available portion is the catch. According to Oregon State Extension PNW-636 (Estimating Plant-Available Nitrogen from Cover Crops), roughly 30 to 70 percent of total N becomes available to the following crop in the first season, with the rest released over 2 to 3 years.
Non-legume green manures do not fix nitrogen, but they bring four other powerful benefits: deep root channels that break compaction, massive biomass for organic matter, weed suppression through allelopathy or shade, and nutrient cycling (especially phosphorus).
Cereal rye (Secale cereale). The most popular winter cover in the US. Roots reach 4 to 6 feet, biomass commonly tops 3 to 4 tons per acre. Strong weed suppression through allelopathic compounds. Penn State Extension's home garden cover crops tips rate it the best all-around winter cover for zones 3 to 8.
Buckwheat (Fagopyrum esculentum). The fastest green manure available. Reaches full bloom in 30 to 45 days. WSU Center for Sustaining Agriculture research on buckwheat and phosphorus shows that buckwheat solubilizes bound phosphorus and makes it available to subsequent crops. Bonus: a magnet for pollinators.
Tillage radish (Raphanus sativus var. niger). Single roots reach 3 to 6 feet, drilling through compaction layers. According to the USDA NRCS Plant Guide for Raphanus sativus, winter-killed tillage radish leaves a 6-inch wide root channel and significant residue N for the spring crop.
Mustard (Brassica spp.). Releases isothiocyanates that suppress nematodes and certain soil-borne diseases. Oregon State Extension EM 9530 documents the biofumigation effect when mustard is chopped and immediately incorporated.
Oats (Avena sativa). Winter-kills in zones 5 and colder. Easy spring cleanup, decomposes quickly, no allelopathy issues.
| Season | Sow when | Best species |
| Late summer / early fall | 6 to 8 weeks before first frost | Cereal rye, hairy vetch, Austrian pea, crimson clover |
| Spring | 2 to 4 weeks before last frost | Oats, field peas, buckwheat (after frost) |
| Summer (gap between crops) | Anytime soil is workable | Buckwheat (30 to 45 days), cowpea, sun hemp, sorghum-sudangrass |
Source: UVM Extension Spring Cover Crops and UMass Extension Cover Crops and Green Manures
Termination timing is non-negotiable. The rule from USDA NRCS Cover Crop Termination fact sheet: terminate when the crop is at peak biomass and starting to flower, but BEFORE seed set. Wait too long and you create a weed problem. Terminate too early and you waste biomass.
Home garden termination methods, easiest to hardest:
Winter-kill. Plant species that die in your zone's winter. Oats, daikon radish, field peas in zones 5 and colder all winter-kill. Spring arrives with a perfect dead mulch on the bed.
Chop and drop. Cut with a sickle or hedge shears at the base. Let the residue lie on the soil. Next crop plants through it. Works for buckwheat, oats, low-growing clovers.
Mow. Walk-behind mower set high (6 inches). Mow once at full bloom for buckwheat and clover. Mow twice 7 to 10 days apart for rye and vetch (they regrow if cut once).
Crimp / roll. A roller crimper or a 2x4 dragged across the bed lays the crop flat and crushes the stems. Rodale Institute roller-crimper research shows this works best when rye is at the milk stage (just past pollination).
Sheet mulch over. Lay cardboard on the standing or chopped cover crop, then mulch on top. Plants suffocate, decompose in place.
Solar tarp. Black silage tarp for 3 to 5 weeks in spring. Plants die, residue stays in place.
| Seed | Price per lb (2026) | Coverage | Cost per 1,000 sqft |
| Cereal rye | $2 to $4 | 5 to 8 lb / 1,000 sqft | $10 to $32 |
| Crimson clover | $4 to $7 | 0.5 to 1 lb / 1,000 sqft | $2 to $7 |
| Hairy vetch | $5 to $9 | 1 to 2 lb / 1,000 sqft | $5 to $18 |
| Austrian winter pea | $3 to $6 | 3 to 5 lb / 1,000 sqft | $9 to $30 |
| Buckwheat | $2 to $4 | 2 to 3 lb / 1,000 sqft | $4 to $12 |
| Tillage radish | $4 to $8 | 0.5 lb / 1,000 sqft | $2 to $4 |
| Oats | $1.50 to $3 | 4 to 6 lb / 1,000 sqft | $6 to $18 |
Source: Johnny's Selected Seeds 2026 farm seed pricing and Albert Lea Seed crimson clover catalogue
A 1,000 sqft garden cover-cropped twice a year with a clover-rye mix costs about $15 to $25 annually in seed. That replaces $30 to $60 of bagged fertilizer plus the soil-structure and weed-suppression benefits that bagged fertilizer cannot deliver.
Green manure is the practical expression of David Holmgren's permaculture principle "Catch and Store Energy." A bag of synthetic nitrogen fertilizer represents energy already spent: methane mined from a gas well, processed at 800 degrees Fahrenheit through the Haber-Bosch process, trucked to a warehouse, trucked to a store, trucked to your garden. A handful of crimson clover seed catches solar energy and atmospheric nitrogen for free, on your own soil, while building organic matter, feeding earthworms, and producing flowers for your bees. The savings are real. The soil improvement is real. The catch is the discipline: terminate before seed set, time the sowing to match your season, and rotate intelligently. Master the discipline once and your fertilizer line item drops to near zero for the next 30 years.
Fall vegetable bed coming out in October? Cereal rye + hairy vetch. Summer gap between spring lettuce and fall garlic? Buckwheat. Need to break compaction? Tillage radish.
Broadcast onto a freshly raked, weed-free bed. Use the per-1,000 sqft rates in the table above. Rake lightly to cover seed, water in.
Buckwheat: 30 to 45 days. Crimson clover: 90 to 120 days. Hairy vetch: 150 to 200 days. Watch for first flowers as your trigger to terminate.
Use the easiest termination method that works for your species. Winter-kill for cold-tender species, chop-and-drop for buckwheat and oats, mow twice for rye and vetch.
Generally 2 to 4 weeks after termination for direct-seeded crops, 1 week for transplants. After cereal rye, wait 3 weeks before direct-seeding small-seed crops like carrots or lettuce (allelopathy).
Begin with our free 7-Layer Backyard Guide and pair a $7 bag of crimson clover with your fall garden cleanup. Read the Free Guide
Green manure is a cover crop grown specifically to be chopped or tilled into the soil before it goes to seed, releasing nitrogen, organic matter, and other nutrients for the next crop. Legume green manures (clover, vetch, peas, beans) also fix atmospheric nitrogen at rates of 50 to 200 lb per acre per season.
For most US zones, cereal rye plus hairy vetch is the all-around winner for fall-to-spring. Buckwheat is the best summer gap-filler at 30 to 45 days from sowing to bloom. Crimson clover is the best single-species pick if you want simple sowing and lots of nitrogen.
Yes. All clovers (crimson, red, white, sub, and others) host Rhizobium bacteria in root nodules that fix atmospheric nitrogen. Crimson clover typically fixes 70 to 150 lb per acre per season, with 30 to 70 percent of that becoming available to the next crop in the first year.
Late summer or early fall (6 to 8 weeks before first frost) for winter cover crops like cereal rye, hairy vetch, and crimson clover. Spring (2 to 4 weeks before last frost) for oats and field peas. Anytime soil is workable for fast summer green manures like buckwheat.
At peak biomass, when the crop starts to flower but BEFORE seed set. Buckwheat at first bloom (30 to 45 days). Crimson clover at full red bloom (90 to 120 days). Cereal rye at milk stage just past pollination. Hairy vetch when 30 percent of plants are flowering.
Buckwheat for summer gaps (fast, easy to chop). Crimson clover for fall-to-spring (low growing, easy to terminate). Avoid cereal rye in small raised beds because it gets too tall to manage easily without a mower.
Most cover crop seed costs $2 to $8 per pound in 2026. A 1,000 sqft home garden cover-cropped twice a year typically uses $15 to $25 of seed annually, replacing $30 to $60 of bagged fertilizer plus delivering soil-structure and weed-suppression benefits.
Over 2 to 4 years, yes. A consistent program of legume green manures plus deep-rooted non-legumes (tillage radish, cereal rye) progressively builds organic matter, breaks compaction, increases water-holding capacity, and rebuilds the microbial community. It is not a one-season fix.
Green manure crops feed your soil for the cost of a few dollars of seed. Legumes (crimson clover, hairy vetch, Austrian pea, cowpea) fix 50 to 200 lb of nitrogen per acre per season from the air. Non-legumes (cereal rye, buckwheat, tillage radish, oats) add biomass, break compaction, suppress weeds, and cycle phosphorus. A 1,000 sqft garden cover-cropped twice a year runs $15 to $25 in seed and replaces $30 to $60 of bagged fertilizer plus delivers soil-structure benefits no fertilizer can match. The discipline that makes it work: pick the right species for your slot, terminate before seed set, and wait the right interval before planting the next crop. Master it once and your fertilizer line drops to near zero for the rest of the time you garden.
Continue your soil learning: read our Soil Health pillar guide and our deep dive on fixing soil compaction next.