Conventional rotary dryers are equipped with flights placed parallel along the length of the shell to promote a rain of solids across the dryer section. In the roto-aerated dryer the hot air flows through the particles that run on the bottom of the drum through a series of mini-pipes and there is no cascading. This study analyzed heat and mass transfer modeling between the air and the fertilizer particles in conventional rotary and roto-aerated dryers, as well as the simulation results with the experimental data. A good agreement between the simulated and experimental results was obtained for the two rotary dryer configurations analyzed.