A phosphorylation (phosphate precipitation) technology of metal chlorides is considering as a proper treatment method for recovering the fission products in a spent molten salt. In KAERI’s previous precipitation tests, the powder of lithium phosphate (Li3PO4) as a precipitation agent reacted with metal chlorides in a simulated LiCl-KCl molten salt. The reaction of metal chlorides containing actinides such as uranium and rare earths with lithium phosphate in a molten salt was known as solidliquid reaction. In order to increase the precipitation reaction rate the powder of lithium phosphate dispersed by stirring thoroughly in a molten salt. As one of the recovery methods of the metal phosphates precipitated on the bottom of the molten salt vessel cutting method at the lower part of the salt ingot is considered. On the other hand, a vacuum distillation method of all the molten salt containing the metal phosphates precipitates was proposed as another recovering method. In recent study, a new method for collecting the phosphorylation reaction products into a small recovering vessel was investigated resulting in some test data by using the lithium phosphate ingot in a molten salt containing uranium and three rare earth elements (Nd, Ce, and La). The phosphorylation experiments using lithium phosphate ingots carried out to collect the metal phosphate precipitates and the test result of this new method was feasible. However, the reaction rate of test using lithium phosphate ingot is very slower than that of test using lithium phosphate powder. In this presentation, the precipitation reactor design used for phosphorylation reaction shows that the amount of molten salt transferred to the distillation unit will reduce by collecting all of the metal phosphates that will be generated using lithium phosphate powder into a small recovering vessel.