Protect streams by understanding runoff drivers in minutes. Tune fertilizing, watering, and buffers for safety. Make every application smarter, cleaner, and more efficient today.
| Scenario | Area (m²) | Slope (%) | Soil | Rain (mm/hr) | N (g/m²) | P (g/m²) | Cover (%) | Water distance (m) | Buffer (m) | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mulched beds near drain | 40 | 6 | Loam | 20 | 3.0 | 1.0 | 70 | 10 | 1 | Moderate risk |
| Recently fertilized slope | 80 | 18 | Clay | 35 | 6.0 | 2.5 | 35 | 15 | 2 | High to very high |
| Drip irrigation with buffer | 60 | 3 | Loam | 10 | 2.0 | 0.8 | 85 | 40 | 6 | Low to moderate |
Example results are qualitative; your score depends on all selected factors.
This calculator converts each driver into a 0–1 risk factor, then computes a weighted score:
The method is a screening model for comparison and prioritization. Use local guidance and soil tests for final nutrient decisions.
Nutrient runoff risk rises when rainfall or irrigation produces surface flow across exposed soil. Steeper slopes, compacted surfaces, and low ground cover increase flow velocity and reduce filtration time. Even small gardens can export nutrients when water concentrates into rills that reach drains, ditches, or streams. Use this calculator to screen conditions before changing rates or schedules.
Applied nitrogen and phosphorus are most vulnerable soon after spreading, especially before intense storms. Higher rates increase the concentration in runoff water and transported sediment. Split applications, slow-release products, and soil-test-based planning lower the available pool at any one time. A simple rule is to avoid applications within 24–48 hours of forecast heavy rain.
A vegetated buffer acts as a filter: stems slow water, roots improve infiltration, and litter traps sediment. Wider buffers generally reduce the portion of runoff that reaches open water. Distance to water matters because longer flow paths increase infiltration opportunities and reduce connectivity. Combine buffers with flow-spreading practices rather than relying on one control alone.
Sprinklers and hose runoff can exceed infiltration capacity, especially on clay or crusted soils. Drip irrigation applies water slowly, lowering peak flow and keeping nutrients in the root zone. If sprinklers are required, use shorter cycles with soak periods, and never irrigate to the point of ponding or runoff. This calculator reflects these differences in the irrigation driver.
Treat the score as a comparative index. If risk is high, first increase cover, reduce rates, and improve buffers, then adjust timing and irrigation. Recalculate after each change and keep records using the download buttons. Over time, you should see lower factor bars for cover, timing, irrigation, and proximity, confirming improved practice.
| Input | Value | Unit/Note |
|---|---|---|
| Garden area | 75 | m² |
| Slope | 12 | % |
| Soil texture | Clay | |
| Rainfall intensity | 30 | mm/hr |
| Fertilizer type | Conventional | |
| Nitrogen rate | 5.0 | g/m² |
| Phosphorus rate | 2.0 | g/m² |
| Days since application | 1 | day |
| Ground cover | 40 | % |
| Distance to water | 12 | m |
| Buffer strip width | 2 | m |
| Irrigation method | Sprinkler | |
| Drainage condition | Poor | |
| Contouring or raised beds | No |
Paste these values into the form to compare your own situation.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.