Agriculture Excel template

Download the Soil and Fertilization Log Template template for free. Manage soil tests, fertilizer, field records in one workbook.

A free Excel template that makes it easier to organize soil tests, fertilizer plans, application records, and change history in one workbook. The same page also shows the matching web-screen flow.

soil tests fertilizer plans application records change history
Sheets
4

Separate the workflow

Workflow
Traceable

Visualize status

Input
Shareable

Useful for daily operations

Input example

Align the core assumptions first

If you align the main items first, daily checks become much more stable.

Soil test date 2026-04-10
Plot Plot B
Fertilizer Lime
Status Applied

Free download

See what is inside the Excel version first

A free Excel template that makes it easier to organize soil tests, fertilizer plans, application records, and change history in one workbook. After downloading, start by aligning the core assumptions.

File

agriculture_soil_fertilization_log_template_en.xlsx

Sheets
4 sheets
Purpose
soil tests, fertilizer, field records
Align soil tests and fertilizer plans first to reduce missed handoffs.
Keep daily checks and notes in the same workbook for easier review.
Store change history in the same flow for later review.
Download the Excel template

Start with the core assumptions first.

How Excel is used

How to run the workbook in Excel

When registration, status checks, schedule updates, and history stay in one flow, it becomes much easier to avoid misses.

Step 1

Register

First define the core record so the operating standard is aligned.

Step 2

Check status

Organize the current status so daily work is easier to follow.

Step 3

Update schedule

Keep the latest schedule visible so the day is easier to manage.

Step 4

History log

Store changes in one place so the next improvement is easier to see.

Excel to screen mapping

Which Excel columns become which screens?

When you map the data structure directly to screen design, the workflow becomes much easier to understand.

Excel element System element Notes
Excel element
Main register
System element
Main list
Notes
Keeps the core records together.
Excel element
Status board
System element
Status view
Notes
Shows what needs attention.
Excel element
Schedule board
System element
Schedule view
Notes
Keeps the current day visible.
Excel element
History log
System element
History log
Notes
Useful when records change.

Adoption boundary

Where does Excel end and the system begin?

Work volume, number of locations, and notification needs determine how Excel and the web system should be split.

Excel is enough

Small operations

If the team is small and updates are mostly daily, Excel can still handle the workflow very well.

  • Small team
  • Few locations
  • Daily updates
Partial systemization

Lighten confirmation and sharing first

If you move only the list online first, confirmation and sharing become much lighter.

  • Clearer list
  • Split notifications first
  • Lower sharing overhead
Full systemization

Build around records and schedules

If you need multiple locations, many staff, or notifications, it is safer to design for a system from the start.

  • Multiple locations
  • Many staff
  • Notification integration

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Here are the questions people usually ask before they adopt it.

What do you need for an estimate?

If you can share work volume, locations, staff count, and your confirmation method, we can outline the estimate.

Can we use it with our current sheet?

Yes. You can keep the existing sheet and move only the list online first.

Is it suitable for mobile use?

Yes. It is designed with field checks in mind, so mobile viewing and data entry are part of the concept.

Consultation

We can help you decide which parts should stay in Excel and which parts should move into a web system, based on work volume, staff, locations, and change history.

We can tune the columns to match your current workbook.