Hormuz shipping traffic remains at a trickle as US-Iran deadlock deepens


Ships and boats in the Strait of Hormuz, Musandam, Oman, April 29, 2026. REUTERS/Stringer

LONDON, April 29 (Reuters) - At least ⁠six ships - a fraction of the usual traffic - have crossed the ⁠Strait of Hormuz in the past 24 hours, shipping data showed on ‌Wednesday, while the U.S. and Iran remain deadlocked over coming to terms that would re-open the crucial waterway.

The vessel traffic was mainly through Iranian waters and included the Vast Plus chemical tanker, ​which is subject to US sanctions, according to ⁠Kpler ship-tracking data and satellite analysis ⁠from SynMax.

Most of the ships were dry bulk carriers, and Reuters could not ⁠determine ‌if more than six had transited the strait, but ship traffic has averaged around seven vessels a day in recent days.

That's a minusculepercentage ⁠of the normal flow through the crucial waterway at the ​entrance to the Gulf, ‌which was at 125 to 140 daily passages before the Iran ⁠war began on ​February 28.

U.S. President Donald Trump urged Iran on Wednesday to 'get smart soon' and sign a deal, following days of deadlock in efforts to end the conflict and a media ⁠report that the U.S. would extend its blockade ​of Iran's ports.

"Despite the 8 Apr 2026 US-Iran ceasefire, commercial traffic remains limited, with constrained transits and continued routing uncertainty," the US navy-led Joint Maritime Information Center said ⁠in its latest assessment report this week.

Iranian officials have floated a proposal to charge ships a toll for sailing through the strait.

Shipping companies that make any payment to Iran for passage through Hormuz resultin sanctions exposure even for non-U.S. persons, ​the U.S. Treasury said in an advisory on Tuesday.

Payments ⁠to the government of Iran or the Revolutionary Guards "directly or indirectly" for safe ​passage through the Strait of Hormuz would not be ‌authorized for U.S. persons, including U.S. financial ​institutions, or for U.S.-owned or -controlled foreign entities, Treasury said.

"Such payments also create significant sanctions exposure for non-U.S. persons," it said.

(Reporting by Jonathan Saul)

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