Dryland primary production is often nitrogen (N) limited due in part to spatiotemporal decoupling of soil nutrient availability and plant uptake. Our aim is to quantify inorganic and organic N uptake at daily timescales to compare short-term nutrient acquisition patterns among dryland plant species. We assessed N uptake in three commonly co-occurring perennial plant species from a Chihuahuan Desert grassland (a C4 grass, C3 grass, and C3 subshrub). In the greenhouse, we applied 15N-ammonium, nitrate, or glutamate tracers to plant roots and quantified uptake and recovery in leaves after 12, 24, and 48 h. Plants took up inorganic and amino acid N to leaves as rapidly as 12 h following application, and uptake more than doubled between 24 and 48 h. Inorganic N uptake was 3-4x higher than glutamate in all three species, and plants took up ammonium and nitrate at 2-3x faster rates overall. On average, Bouteloua eriopoda had the highest inorganic N recovery and uptake rates, while Gutierrezia sarothrae had the highest glutamate uptake over time. Achnatherum hymenoides uptake was ~50% lower than the other two species after 48 h. Plants showed similar patterns of short-term foliar uptake and recovery indicating a lack of niche partitioning by N form among the three dryland species measured. Our results suggest that soil inorganic N, particularly nitrate, may comprise a greater proportion of plant N nutrition than amino acid-N and may be more widely exploited following a precipitation pulse in this habitat.