Although we know soil phosphorus (P) can rapidly increase when fertilizer or manure is continually applied at rates exceeding crop removal, there is little information on the rate of P release from high P soils as a function of soil type. Surface samples (0-5 cm) were collected from five major soil types in Pennsylvania (Chester silt loam, Conotton loam. Duffield silt loam, Hagerstown silt loam, and Washington loam), covering a wide range in Mehlich-3 extractable P (180-690 mg kg(-1)). There was a soil dependent exponential increase in CaCl2-extractable soil P, which reflects soil solution P movement in subsurface drainage, with increasing Mehlich-3 P concentration. The kinetics of this P release as determined by sequential extraction of soil and iron (Fe)-oxide strips, varied among soils as a function of soil P concentration (R-2 of 0.55-0.64). The decrease in rate of P release with successive soil extractions was less at higher initial soil P concentrations, indicative of diffusion-limited P release. The data of this study suggest that for a given soil type. soil P depletion can be estimated from Mehlich-3 extractable soil P concentration. However, data for a wider range of soils is needed to evaluate the universality and practicality of this predictive approach.