Urea has become the most widely used form of N fertilizer in the world, particularly in the tropics. Its efficiency, however, is decreased by losses of N through ammonia volatilization when the urea is not incorporated into the soil. High temperatures and high biological activity at the soil surface promote rapid hydrolysis of urea to ammonia and carbonate species by the soil enzyme urease, leading to large ammonia losses. These conditions have generated interest in materials that can inhibit the urease enzyme, slowing urea hydrolysis and allowing the urea to move away from the soil surface to where it is not as susceptible to ammonia loss. The phosphoryl di- and triamides, which are structural analogs of urea, meet the requirements for effective soil urease inhibition to varying degrees depending on the conditions of their use. Until the discovery of these compounds, there was little hope that urease inhibition could be achieved either economically or in an environmentally acceptable way. Included in this group is N-(n-butyl) thiophosphoric triamide (NBTPT), which is that most widely tested proinhibitor or precursor of the actual inhibitor N-(n-butyl) phosphoric triamide. Recent research in tropical rice systems indicates that urease inhibitors such as N-(n-butyl) phosphoric triamide and cyclohexylphosphoric triamide can play an important role in increasing urea efficiency. In some experiments where urease inhibition was only partially successful, better results were obtained when the phosphoroamides were used in conjunction with an algicide, to restrict ammonia loss, and nitrification inhibitors, to reduce loss of N by denitrification. Further research on tropical soils in different environments is required to determine the most suitable combination of inhibitors to reduce N loss and increase the efficiency of fertilizer N use.