Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Here’s how you know

Dot gov

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

HTTPS

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock (LockA locked padlock) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Emergency

This is not the current EPA website. To navigate to the current EPA website, please go to www.epa.gov. This website is historical material reflecting the EPA website as it existed on January 19, 2025. This website is no longer updated and links to external websites and some internal pages may not work. More information »

    • Environmental Topics
    • Air
    • Bed Bugs
    • Cancer
    • Chemicals, Toxics, and Pesticide
    • Climate Change
    • Emergency Response
    • Environmental Information by Location
    • Environmental Justice
    • Greener Living
    • Health
    • Land, Waste, and Cleanup
    • Lead
    • Mold
    • Radon
    • Research
    • Science Topics
    • Water Topics
    • A-Z Topic Index
    • Laws & Regulations
    • By Business Sector
    • By Topic
    • Compliance
    • Enforcement
    • Laws and Executive Orders
    • Regulations
    • Report a Violation
    • Environmental Violations
    • Fraud, Waste or Abuse
    • About EPA
    • Our Mission and What We Do
    • Headquarters Offices
    • Regional Offices
    • Labs and Research Centers
    • Planning, Budget, and Results
    • Organization Chart
    • EPA History
    • Staff Directory

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. Pesticides

Mitigation Menu

Helpful Links

  • Purpose and Background of Mitigation Menu
  • Bulletins Live! Two
  • USDA’s Web Soil Survey tool to determine soil texture
  • EPA’s ESA Workplan Update
  • Herbicide Strategy Docket
  • Insecticide Strategy Docket
  • Vulnerable Species Action Plan Docket
  • Mitigation Menu Website Archives
  • Mitigation Menu Descriptions

Date of last update: October 16, 2024

On this page:
  • How do I know if Runoff/Erosion Mitigation is Required?
  • Runoff/Erosion Mitigation Options

How do I know if Runoff/Erosion Mitigation is Required?

Pesticide users will need to plan their pesticide applications in advance to determine whether they are subject to runoff/erosion mitigation. These mitigation requirements will appear on product labels and/or Bulletins for the product in the Bulletins Live, Two! System. If a label directs users to check Bulletins, they must do so to determine if additional mitigation requirements apply to their farm/field(s), beyond the requirements that appear on the label.

Pesticide applicators need to follow the steps below to determine which runoff/erosion mitigation measures to consider and employ before using a pesticide for their operation each year.

Step 1: At the field or farm level, what crops are being grown and what pesticides are expected be used throughout the entire growing season/year?

Step 2: Of these pesticides, do any product labels or bulletins specify that runoff/erosion mitigation points need to be achieved? If yes, move to step 3. If no, the product does not require runoff/erosion mitigation points. Follow existing label/bulletin instructions.

Step 3: Evaluate the farm/field(s) being treated. You do not have to implement any additional runoff/erosion measures for the application if the answer is “yes” to any one of the following questions:

  • Does the treated farm/field have a perimeter berm system (permanent berms, elevated border/perimeter) present at the time of application and throughout the cropping season?
  • Is there an irrigation tailwater return system in place?
  • Does the treated farm/field have subsurface or tile drains installed with a water control structure and controlled outlet?
  • Is the application occurring as a soil injection?
  • Is the application occurring as a tree injection?
  • Is the application occurring via chemigation applied subsurface or under impermeable plastic mulch?
  • Is the application occurring as a spot treatment (<1,000 square feet being treated), e.g., backpack, handheld, or specialized application equipment?
  • Is the treated farm/field less than 1/10th of an acre?
  • Are the areas within 1,000 ft down-gradient from the treated farm/field comprised entirely of managed areas? Managed areas are defined as:
    • Agricultural fields, including untreated portions of the treated field,
    • Roads, paved or gravel surfaces, mowed grassy areas adjacent to field, and areas of bare ground from recent plowing or grading that are contiguous with the treated area;
    • Buildings and their perimeters, silos, or other man-made structures with walls and/or roof;
    • Areas maintained as a mitigation measure for runoff/erosion or spray drift control, such as vegetative filter strips (VFS), field borders, hedgerows, Conservation Reserve Program lands (CRP), and other measures identified in Table 2 below;
    • Managed wetlands including constructed wetlands on the farm, and
    • On-farm contained irrigation water resources that are not connected to adjacent water bodies, including on-farm irrigation canals and ditches, water conveyances, managed irrigation/runoff retention basins, and tailwater collection ponds.

Step 4. If the answer is no to all questions in step 3, runoff/erosion mitigation applies for the application. Determine which product being used throughout the crop cycle/year is the most restrictive, thereby requiring the highest number of mitigation points. Ensure the point value of mitigation measures being implemented equals or exceeds the highest number of mitigation points noted in labels/bulletins.

Step 5. Visit the mitigation menu (Tables 1 and 2 below) to determine what measures are available for you to choose to fulfill the strictest runoff/erosion requirements. For each measure, click on the associated link to see the minimum specifications needed to successfully implement that measure.

  • The Crosswalk of EPA’s Ecological Mitigation Measures with USDA NRCS Conservation Practices in Support of EPA’s Endangered Species Strategies (pdf) (249.43 KB)  provides information on how voluntary participation in NRCS and other conservation programs can help achieve runoff/erosion mitigation points.

Step 6. For all pesticides, if additional restrictions are defined on the label that are more restrictive than the runoff/erosion measures listed on this website, then you must follow the more restrictive measure on the label. Examples include use prohibitions, timing restrictions, application method prohibitions, and sandy soil application restrictions.

As EPA receives new information on mitigation measures and their efficacy, the Agency will update this Mitigation Menu Website to include additional or updated mitigation options and descriptions. EPA intends to update this website annually in the fall so pesticide users can prepare for the next growing season.
 

Runoff/Erosion Mitigation Options

You may use the measures in Tables 1 and 2 unless you see more restrictive limitations on individual labels or bulletins. If you use these tables, you may select any combination of measures in the tables to achieve the minimum points required by the label or bulletin.

EPA’s runoff points calculator (xlsm) (172.28 KB) and Mitigation Calculator User Guide (pdf) (853.68 KB) can help you calculate the number of points earned for practices already in place on the field.

Click here for a PDF version Mitigation Menu (pdf) (301.62 KB) .

Table 1. Mitigation relief options.
Mitigation Relief Pesticide Runoff Vulnerability and Field Characteristics Points

County-based mitigation relief [see runoff vulnerability map by county and County list (pdf) (550.52 KB) ]

Select one option

Pesticide runoff vulnerability - very low 6
Pesticide runoff vulnerability - low 3
Pesticide runoff vulnerability - medium 2
Pesticide runoff vulnerability - high 0
Field slope Field slope ≤3% (naturally low slope or flat fields; flat laser leveled fields) 2

Predominantly sandy soils

This option can only be used if the product label does not prohibit application on sandy soils

>50% sand, loamy sand, or sandy loam soil without a restrictive layer that impedes the movement of water through the soil 2
Mitigation tracking Documented at the field or farm level, using paper or electronic format 1

Working with and following recommendations from a technical specialist

OR

Participating in a qualifying conservation program

Select one; points are not additive for doing both

The technical specialist must meet the following characteristics:

  • Have technical training, education and/or experience in an agricultural discipline, water or soil conservation, or other relevant disciplines that provides training and practice in the area of runoff or erosion mitigation technologies/measures; and
  • Participate in continued education or training in the area of expertise which should include runoff and erosion control; and
  • Have experience advising on conservation measures designed to develop site specific runoff and erosion plans that include mitigation measures described in Table 2 below.
     
1

The conservation program must meet the following characteristics:

  • Provides advice from individuals who meet the same characteristics provided above for technical specialists; and
  • Provides site-specific guidance tailored to the grower/applicator’s crop and/or location; and
  • Focuses on reducing or managing runoff and/or erosion (including for example, soil loss, soil conservation, water quality protection) from agricultural fields or other pesticide use sites; and
  • Provides documentation of program enrollment for the program enrollee. This documentation does not need to be provided to EPA; and
    • Includes verification of implementation of the recommended measures or activities (measures were established and maintained). Verification can be done through the conservation program and provided to the program enrollee. Verification is not required to be submitted to EPA.
2
Table 2. Runoff/erosion mitigation options
Mitigation Qualifying Practices Points
Application parameters

Annual application rate reduction

Select one option

Any application 10% to ˂30% less than the maximum labeled annual application rate 1
Any application 30% to ˂60% less than the maximum labeled annual application rate 2
Any application ≥60% less than the maximum labeled annual application rate 3

Reduction in the proportion of field treated (banded application, partial field treatment, ground precision sprayer, smart sprayer, or other specialized method)

Select one option

Portion of field not treated: 10 to ˂30% 2
Portion of field not treated: 30 to ˂60% 3
Portion of field not treated: ≥60% 4
Soil incorporation

Watering-in or mechanical incorporation before a runoff producing event. A runoff producing event is considered as follows:

  • A 50% or greater chance of rainfall of 1 inch or more is expected to occur within 48 hours of the application as predicted by the NOAA/National Weather Service. AND,
  • The precipitation potential is 50% or greater at any point during the 48-hr period.
1
In-field mitigation measures

Conservation tillage

Select one option

No-till, including perennial crops (e.g., orchards that are not tilled) 3
Reduced tillage, strip tillage, ridge tillage, mulch tillage 2
Reservoir tillage Reservoir tillage, furrow diking, basin tillage 3
Contour farming Contour farming, contour tillage, contour orchard and perennial crops 2
Vegetative Strips - In-Field Inter-row vegetated strips, strip cropping or intercropping, alley cropping, prairie strips, contour buffer strips, contour strip cropping, vegetative barrier (occurring in a contoured field) 2
Terrace farming Terrace farming, terracing, field terracing 2

Cover crop or continuous ground cover

Select one option

Cover crop or continuous ground cover; with tillage  1
Cover crop or continuous ground cover; no tillage; short-term cover crop 2
Cover crop or continuous ground cover; no tillage; long-term cover crop 3

Irrigation water management

Select one option

Use of soil moisture sensors/evapotranspiration meters with center pivots & sprinklers; above ground drip tape, drip emitters; micro-sprinklers

General irrigation management

2

Use of below tarp irrigation, below ground drip tape; dry farming, non-irrigated lands

No irrigation

3

Mulching

Select one option

Mulching with permeable artificial materials (i.e., landscape fabrics, synthetic mulches) 1
Mulching with natural materials 3
Erosion barriers Wattles, silt fences 2
Field-adjacent mitigation measures
Grassed waterway Grassed waterway 2

Vegetative filter strips (VFS) or field border adjacent to field

Select one option

20 to 30 ft wide  1
30 to <60 ft wide  2
≥60 ft wide  3
Vegetated ditch Vegetated ditch 1

Riparian area; riparian forest buffer; riparian herbaceous cover

Select one option

20 to <30 ft  1
30 to <60 ft  2
≥60 ft  3
Constructed and natural wetlands Constructed and natural wetlands, wetland and riparian landscape/habitat improvement 3

Terrestrial habitat landscape improvement (i.e., critical area planting, cross wind trap strips, hedgerow planting, herbaceous wind barriers, windbreak-shelterbelt establishment and renovation, tree shrub planting, forest stand improvement, upland wildlife habitat management)

Select one option

20 to <30 ft 1
30 to <60 ft 2
≥60 ft 3

Filtering devices

Select one option

Filters, sleeves, socks, or filtration units containing activated carbon 3
Filters, sleeves, socks, or filtration units containing compost amendments 1
Systems that capture runoff and discharge
Water retention systems Sediment basins, catch basins, sediment traps, water retention ponds 2
Subsurface drainages and tile drainage installed without controlled drainage structure Subsurface tile drains, tile drains without controlled drainage structure 1
Using mitigation measures from multiple categories

Practices must be used from at least 2 of the following categories: in-field, field-adjacent, or systems that capture runoff and discharge

Examples:
1 in-field measure + 1 field-adjacent measure
OR
1 in-field measure + 1 system that captures runoff and discharge
OR
1 field-adjacent measure + 1 system that captures runoff and discharge

1

Pesticides

  • A-Z Index
  • Antimicrobial Pesticides
  • Biopesticides
Contact Us About Pesticides
Contact Us About Pesticides to ask a question, provide feedback, or report a problem.
Last updated on October 16, 2024
  • Assistance
  • Ayuda
  • Arabic
  • Chinese (simplified)
  • Chinese (traditional)
  • Aide
  • Asistans
  • Korean
  • Assistência
  • Russian
  • Tulong
  • Vietnamese
United States Environmental Protection Agency

Discover.

  • Accessibility Statement
  • Budget & Performance
  • Contracting
  • EPA www Web Snapshot
  • Grants
  • No FEAR Act Data
  • Plain Writing
  • Privacy
  • Privacy and Security Notice

Connect.

  • Data
  • Inspector General
  • Jobs
  • Newsroom
  • Regulations.gov
  • Subscribe
  • USA.gov
  • White House

Ask.

  • Contact EPA
  • EPA Disclaimers
  • Hotlines
  • FOIA Requests
  • Frequent Questions

Follow.