Only 90 Ships Have Crossed Hormuz Since War Broke Out

A total of some 90 ships have passed through the Strait of Hormuz since the U.S. and Israel started bombing Iran earlier this month, according to data from maritime traffic tracking outlets. This is down from over 100 ships traversing the strait on a daily basis before the war.

A lot of these 90 vessels appear to have been oil tankers, the data suggests, with AP, which cited it, saying that many of the successful ships were in so-called dark mode when they passed Hormuz and were likely linked to the Iranian government, according to Lloyd’s List.

Data from Kpler shows that despite the closure of the vital oil chokepoint, Iran has exported over 16 million barrels of crude since the start of the month. This is hardly surprising since it is Iran that controls the strait, preventing the movement of non-Iranian vessels. Recently, however, Tehran also allowed Pakistani and Indian ships to pass through the strait.

“The Strait of Hormuz is open, it is only closed to the tankers and ships belonging to our enemies, to those who are attacking us and their allies. Others are free to pass,” Iran’s Foreign Minister, Abbas Aragchi, said last weekend.

Meanwhile, reports said that Iran was in talks with China to allow Chinese-linked tankers to cross the strait, with an Iranian government official telling a CNN reporter that they may also consider allowing other tankers to traverse the strait as long as their cargo was traded in yuan, per The Telegraph. This may explain why ship tracking firms have been reporting a steady—if meager—flow of Chinese-declared vessels via the Strait of Hormuz in recent days.

Traffic along the chokepoint remains severely constrained, with Windward reporting average passages of no more than a couple of vessels. However, on Tuesday, the firm reported a rare departure of an Iranian oil tanker from the Kooh Mobarak terminal that did not go through the Strait of Hormuz. The terminal is located east of the chokepoint. The tanker was loaded with heavy crude for China, Windward reported.

By Irina Slav for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com

 

  • Related Posts

    Oil Prices Surge as Brent-WTI Spread Blows Out on Iran Supply Risk

    Oil prices surged sharply on Wednesday as the Iran conflict continued to disrupt flows through the Persian Gulf, with the global benchmark pulling decisively away from U.S. crude as the…

    Saudi Arabia Restarts Ras Tanura Refinery After Drone Attack

    Saudi oil giant Aramco has restarted operations at the Kingdom’s biggest refinery Ras Tanura, which was shut as a precaution in the early days of the war following a drone…

    Have You Seen?

    Brent Crude Oil Price Jumps After Attack on Iran’s South Pars Field

    • March 18, 2026
    Brent Crude Oil Price Jumps After Attack on Iran’s South Pars Field

    COMMENTARY: Assessing Energy Security in Europe, US and China as Iran Crisis Drags On

    • March 18, 2026
    COMMENTARY: Assessing Energy Security in Europe, US and China as Iran Crisis Drags On

    COMMENTARY: Latest Oil Crisis Readies Hammer for Demand Curve

    • March 18, 2026
    COMMENTARY: Latest Oil Crisis Readies Hammer for Demand Curve

    Ranked: The Top Crude Oil Producers in 2025 – Visual Capitalist

    • March 18, 2026
    Ranked: The Top Crude Oil Producers in 2025 – Visual Capitalist

    Tehran’s Oil Exports Remain Resilient as Iranian Crude Passes Hormuz

    • March 18, 2026
    Tehran’s Oil Exports Remain Resilient as Iranian Crude Passes Hormuz

    Big Oil’s Green Retreat Marks First Investment Decline Since 2017

    • March 18, 2026
    Big Oil’s Green Retreat Marks First Investment Decline Since 2017

    Saudi Arabia Restarts Ras Tanura Refinery After Drone Attack

    • March 18, 2026
    Saudi Arabia Restarts Ras Tanura Refinery After Drone Attack

    Oil Prices Surge as Brent-WTI Spread Blows Out on Iran Supply Risk

    • March 18, 2026
    Oil Prices Surge as Brent-WTI Spread Blows Out on Iran Supply Risk

    European CO2 squeezed by shrinking industry, says Nippon Gases

    • March 18, 2026
    European CO2 squeezed by shrinking industry, says Nippon Gases

    Top 5 Asia energy policy priorities from Gulf crisis

    • March 18, 2026
    Top 5 Asia energy policy priorities from Gulf crisis