Jeevamrutha Recipe & Benefits for Organic Soil: Complete Guide (2026)

JeevamruthaRecipeBenefitsforOrganicSoilCompleteGuide2026

Jeevamrutha is a fermented liquid biostimulant made from desi cow dung, cow urine, jaggery, pulse flour, and soil — all mixed in water and fermented for 48 hours. It is the core input of ZBNF (Zero Budget Natural Farming) developed by Padma Shri Subhash Palekar and is used by over 6 lakh farmers in Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, and Maharashtra as a soil microbe activator and natural plant immunity booster.

Unlike chemical fertilizers, Jeevamrutha does not directly supply NPK — instead, it delivers billions of beneficial soil bacteria and fungi that unlock nutrients already present in the soil. This guide covers the exact recipe, step-by-step preparation, fermentation process, application methods, and the science behind its benefits.

What are the ingredients for Jeevamrutha?

Jeevamrutha requires 5 key ingredients. The most critical rule: use only desi (indigenous) cow — Jersey, Holstein, or HF cow dung does not work because desi cow dung contains 300 crore beneficial microorganisms per gram vs significantly lower counts in exotic breed dung.

Ingredient Quantity (for 200L) Quantity (for 20L) Purpose
Fresh desi cow dung 10 kg 1 kg Microbial inoculant — billions of beneficial bacteria
Desi cow urine (gomutra) 5 to 10 litres 500 ml to 1 litre Antimicrobial + micronutrient carrier
Jaggery (gud) 1 to 2 kg 100 to 200 g Carbon source — feeds and multiplies microbes
Pulse flour (besan / dal atta) 1 to 2 kg 100 to 200 g Nitrogen + protein — food for microbes
Live soil from banyan/peepal tree base Handful (50 g) 10 g Wild native microbial inoculant
Water (non-chlorinated) Fill to 200 litres Fill to 20 litres Fermentation medium

Key ingredient notes

  • Cow dung must be fresh — collected within 24 hours. Dried or stored dung has much lower microbial count
  • Cow urine: Collect fresh morning urine in a clay or plastic container — avoid metal containers which kill microbes
  • Jaggery: Any form works — powder, block, or liquid. Avoid refined sugar — it does not sustain the right microbial culture
  • Pulse flour: Any local pulse works — besan, toor dal flour, or moong dal flour. Provides nitrogen and amino acids for microbes
  • Soil: Collect from under an old banyan, peepal, or neem tree — these soils are rich in native fungal and bacterial diversity
  • Water: Use well water, river water, or rainwater. Chlorinated tap water kills microbes — if using tap water, let it sit in open container for 24 hours first

How to prepare Jeevamrutha step by step?

Preparation time: 30 minutes active work. Fermentation time: 48 hours. Total time from start to use: 48 to 72 hours.

Equipment needed

  • 200-litre plastic drum or earthen pot (do not use metal — it inhibits fermentation)
  • Wooden stick for stirring — 1.5 to 2 metres long
  • Cloth filter or gunny bag for straining before application
  • Shade cover — Jeevamrutha must ferment away from direct sunlight

Step-by-step preparation (200 litre batch)

  1. Fill the drum with 180 to 190 litres of non-chlorinated water
  2. Add 10 kg fresh desi cow dung — mix thoroughly with hands or wooden stick until no lumps remain
  3. Add 5 to 10 litres of desi cow urine — stir well
  4. Dissolve 1 to 2 kg jaggery in 2 litres warm water separately, then add to drum — jaggery activates microbial growth
  5. Add 1 to 2 kg pulse flour — sprinkle gradually while stirring to avoid clumping
  6. Add a handful of live soil from under a banyan or peepal tree — this is the native microbial seed
  7. Stir the entire mixture vigorously for 5 minutes in a clockwise direction
  8. Cover drum with a jute cloth or loose lid — do not seal airtight, fermentation needs some air
  9. Stir twice daily — morning and evening — for 48 hours. Clockwise stirring creates a vortex that oxygenates the culture
  10. After 48 hours, Jeevamrutha is ready when you see: light foam on surface, earthy-sweet smell (not putrid), and small bubbles indicating active fermentation

Fermentation time varies: In summer (30-40 degrees C) — ready in 48 hours. In winter (below 20 degrees C) — may take 72 to 96 hours. Do not use if it smells putrid or shows mold — discard and start fresh.

How do you know Jeevamrutha is ready to use?

  • Smell: Earthy, slightly sour, fermented smell — similar to buttermilk or mild vinegar. NOT foul or putrid
  • Appearance: Light foam or froth on surface — sign of active microbial activity
  • Bubbles: Small CO2 bubbles visible when you stir — confirms live fermentation
  • Colour: Dark brown liquid — similar to strong black tea
  • Failed batch signs: Strong foul odour like sewage, thick white mold layer on top, or no change after 72 hours — discard, clean drum, and restart

Use Jeevamrutha within 7 days of preparation for maximum microbial potency. After 7 days, microbial count drops significantly. Prepare fresh batches every week during active crop season.

How to apply Jeevamrutha to crops?

Strain Jeevamrutha through a coarse cloth or gunny bag before every application — this removes solid particles that block drippers or spray nozzles.

Method Dilution Dose per Acre Best For
Soil drench (irrigation) 1:10 (1 part Jeevamrutha + 10 parts water) 200 litres diluted Soil microbe activation, root zone
Drip fertigation 1:10 dilution — filter before use 20 litres concentrate Vegetable farms, orchards
Foliar spray 1:20 dilution — filter through cloth 100 to 150 litres Leaf microbiome, minor deficiency correction
Seed treatment Undiluted — soak seeds 30 min As needed per seed quantity Germination boost, seedling vigour
Nursery drench 1:20 dilution 2 litres per 100 sq ft nursery Vegetable seedling establishment

Application schedule — how often?

  • Soil drench: Every 15 days throughout the crop season — minimum 4 to 6 applications per crop cycle
  • Foliar spray: Every 21 days — do not spray during flowering stage as it may affect pollination
  • Drip fertigation: Weekly at low dose — 5 to 10 litres concentrate per acre per week
  • Best time to apply: Early morning before 9 AM or after 5 PM — avoid peak heat when microbes die quickly
  • Avoid applying just before heavy rain — dilution reduces effectiveness

What are the proven benefits of Jeevamrutha for soil and crops?

1. Soil microbiome restoration

Each litre of properly prepared Jeevamrutha contains 500 crore or more beneficial bacteria and fungi. When applied to soil, these microbes colonise the root zone and restart biological nutrient cycling — breaking down organic matter, fixing atmospheric nitrogen, and solubilising locked phosphorus. ICAR studies on ZBNF farms in Karnataka showed a 2 to 4x increase in soil microbial biomass after 2 years of regular Jeevamrutha use.

2. Nutrient unlocking from existing soil reserves

Most Indian farm soils have accumulated phosphorus from years of DAP application that is chemically locked and unavailable to plants. Jeevamrutha introduces Phosphate Solubilising Bacteria (PSB) naturally present in cow dung that convert this locked P into plant-available form — effectively reducing DAP requirement by 20 to 30% in soils with high P accumulation.

3. Plant immunity and disease resistance

Beneficial microbes from Jeevamrutha colonise the rhizosphere (root zone) and produce natural antibiotics and antifungal compounds that suppress soil-borne pathogens including Fusarium, Pythium, and Rhizoctonia. Farmers using ZBNF in Andhra Pradesh report 30 to 50% reduction in fungicide application after 2 to 3 seasons of consistent Jeevamrutha use.

4. Improved water retention

Increased microbial activity improves soil aggregation — the binding of soil particles into crumb-like structures. This improves water infiltration by 20 to 40% and reduces irrigation frequency. Particularly beneficial for black cotton soil in Maharashtra which tends to crack and become hydrophobic when dry.

5. Near-zero input cost

A 200-litre batch of Jeevamrutha costs Rs. 50 to 150 in ingredients if you own a desi cow — or is effectively free if you have access to cow dung on your farm. This makes it the highest ROI input in organic farming when combined with proper crop management.

Jeevamrutha vs chemical fertilizer vs vermicompost — which is better?

Jeevamrutha is not a replacement for fertilizers — it is a soil activator. Here is how it compares:

Factor Jeevamrutha Chemical Fertilizer Vermicompost
Cost per acre Rs. 50 to 150 (mostly free) Rs. 3,000 to 6,000 Rs. 1,500 to 3,000
Nutrient content Very low — primarily microbial High — direct NPK Moderate — slow release NPK
Speed of effect 7 to 21 days (soil biology) 3 to 7 days (direct uptake) 3 to 6 weeks
Soil health impact Excellent — builds microbiome Negative long-term Good — improves structure
Pest/disease resistance Improves plant immunity No benefit Moderate benefit
Best role Soil activator + immunity booster Yield driver Soil conditioner

Best practice: Use Jeevamrutha as the foundation of your soil management — apply every 15 days. Combine with vermicompost as basal dose and reduce chemical fertilizer gradually over 2 to 3 seasons as soil biology improves. Do not stop chemical fertilizers abruptly in the first year — yield drop will occur.

Common mistakes farmers make with Jeevamrutha

  • Using exotic breed cow dung: Jersey or HF dung has far fewer beneficial microbes than desi breeds like Gir, Sahiwal, or Deoni — results will be poor
  • Using metal drums: Copper, iron, and aluminium ions leach into the liquid and kill microbes — always use plastic or clay containers
  • Sealing the drum airtight: Fermentation is aerobic in the initial stage — needs some oxygen. Airtight sealing produces the wrong microbial culture
  • Not stirring twice daily: Stirring oxygenates the culture and prevents anaerobic zones where harmful bacteria grow
  • Applying through clogged drippers: Always strain before use — solid particles from cow dung block emitters within 1 to 2 applications
  • Expecting immediate results: Jeevamrutha builds soil biology over months — do not expect the same yield jump as chemical fertilizers in the first season

Summary

Jeevamrutha is one of the most cost-effective and proven organic soil inputs available to Indian farmers — combining the microbial richness of desi cow dung with the nutrient support of jaggery and pulse flour to create a powerful soil activator at almost zero cost. The key to success is consistency — apply every 15 days without fail, use only fresh desi cow dung, ferment in a non-metal container with twice-daily stirring, and give it at least 2 to 3 seasons to rebuild your soil biology.

It works best as part of a broader organic transition — combine with vermicompost, Beejamrutha seed treatment, and Dashaparni Ark for pest management to build a fully integrated ZBNF system on your farm.

Using Jeevamrutha on a specific crop and want to know the right dose and schedule? Drop your crop name and farm size in the comments.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use Jeevamrutha without a desi cow?

Desi cow dung is strongly preferred and recommended under ZBNF principles. However, if desi cow is not available, you can use dung from local mixed-breed cows as a starting point — results will be less potent but still beneficial. Buffalo dung is not recommended as it has different microbial composition. If no cow is available locally, contact your nearest Goshala or dairy cooperative — many provide desi cow dung to farmers at low or no cost.

How is Jeevamrutha different from Beejamrutha?

Jeevamrutha is a soil and foliar application — it feeds and activates the soil microbiome throughout the crop season. Beejamrutha is a seed treatment preparation made from similar ingredients but in smaller, more concentrated quantities — used only for coating seeds before sowing to protect germinating seeds from soil-borne diseases and boost early root development. Both are ZBNF inputs developed by Subhash Palekar but serve different purposes at different crop stages.

Can Jeevamrutha be used for all crops?

Yes — Jeevamrutha is suitable for all crops including cereals, pulses, vegetables, fruits, and plantation crops. It is widely used for paddy, sugarcane, banana, cotton, onion, tomato, and vegetable crops. Application frequency and dilution ratio may vary by crop — vegetable crops benefit from more frequent application (every 10 to 15 days) while fruit trees need less frequent application (every 21 to 30 days).

Does Jeevamrutha expire? How long can it be stored?

Jeevamrutha is most potent within 48 to 72 hours of fermentation completion. It can be used up to 7 days after preparation with moderate effectiveness. Beyond 7 days, the beneficial microbial count drops significantly and the preparation starts to putrefy. Do not store beyond 7 days — prepare fresh batches every week during the crop season. In cool weather (below 20 degrees C), it may keep for up to 10 days.

Is Jeevamrutha approved for certified organic farming?

Yes — Jeevamrutha is compliant with all major organic certification standards in India including NPOP (National Programme for Organic Production) and PGS-India (Participatory Guarantee System). It contains no synthetic chemicals and is derived entirely from natural farm inputs. If you are pursuing organic certification, document your Jeevamrutha preparation batches with dates, ingredients, and application records as part of your organic farm management plan.

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