The Strait of Hormuz remains in a severely disrupted maritime state, with the latest HormuzTracker dashboard showing no active commercial vessel transits in real time, Al Mayadeen reported.
According to the live AIS-based monitoring system, the current snapshot indicates:
This confirms a continued complete halt in detected commercial navigation activity, with no crude oil tankers, LNG carriers, bulk carriers, or container ships recorded moving through the Strait during the latest update window.
The tracker’s “Today's Transit Summary” shows that all vessel categories, including crude tankers and product/LPG carriers, remain at zero live movement and zero completed exits, indicating that the chokepoint is still effectively non-operational for outbound shipping at this time.
This continues a broader pattern observed in the system’s historical data, where recent days have consistently shown either extremely reduced flows or complete stagnation, depending on AIS detection availability and routing restrictions.
With no vessels broadcasting active movement in the monitored radius, the Strait is currently functioning as a non-flow maritime corridor, where:
Commercial outbound shipping remains paused;
No energy cargo movements are detected;
AIS signals show no verified crossings in the latest cycle.
As of today’s tracker update, the Strait of Hormuz is in a zero-traffic phase, with maritime movement effectively halted according to live AIS detection data from HormuzTracker.
bd-pratidin/GR