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Highly Enriched Uranium
Concept

Highly Enriched Uranium

Uranium enriched above 20% U-235; the fissile material for nuclear weapons.

Last refreshed: 29 May 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic

Key Question

Why is Iran's 60%-enriched uranium the hardest item in any nuclear deal?

Timeline for Highly Enriched Uranium

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Common Questions
How much enriched uranium does Iran have?
The IAEA last verified 440.9 kg enriched to 60% in September 2025. The Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists estimates the total may be closer to 540 kg at the Isfahan tunnel complex. No independent verification has been possible since February 2026.Source: event
How close is 60% enrichment to a nuclear weapon?
At 60%, the bulk of the separative work is done. Further enrichment to 90% is technically straightforward but would take weeks to months depending on centrifuge capacity.Source: Arms Control Association
What is a significant quantity of uranium?
The IAEA defines 25 kg of 90%-enriched uranium as the approximate minimum for a single nuclear device.Source: IAEA safeguards glossary

Background

Highly Enriched Uranium (HEU) is the central unresolved item in the 2026 Iran nuclear negotiations. Iran holds an estimated 440-540 kg enriched to 60% at the Isfahan tunnel complex, a figure the IAEA last verified at 440.9 kg in September 2025 before access was terminated. The 28 May 2026 tentative memorandum of understanding deferred HEU disposal entirely to a separate 60-day Phase 2 round, leaving the stockpile's fate as the deal's hardest outstanding problem.

HEU is uranium in which the fissile isotope U-235 has been concentrated beyond the natural 0.7%. Reactor fuel runs at 3-5%; anything above 20% is classified HEU by the IAEA. Weapons-grade material is typically 90%+. Iran's 60% stockpile sits roughly two-thirds of the way to weapons-grade: the bulk of the separative work has already been done, and further enrichment to weapons-grade is technically straightforward. The IAEA defines 25 kg of 90%-enriched uranium as a "significant quantity" — the approximate minimum for a single nuclear device. Iran's stockpile represents many times that threshold in latent weapons potential, even before accounting for downblending losses. The enrichment gap between reactor-grade and weapons-grade is not linear: moving from 3% to 20% requires FAR more separative work than the step from 20% to 90%.

Disposition of the stockpile is the deal's structural deadlock. Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei ordered on 21 May that the material must remain inside Iran, reversing a pre-war offer to export half as a confidence-building measure. On 27 May, Donald Trump rejected both Russia and China as third-country custodians, eliminating the only workaround that might have reconciled the US demand for removal with Iran's refusal to surrender it. With the IAEA locked out of Iran since 28 February 2026 and the Majlis having voted 221-0 to suspend all inspections, no independent verification of the current stockpile location or quantity is possible. Any supervised dilution — Iran's own preferred compromise — would first require reinstating the access its Parliament revoked.

More questions
How much highly enriched uranium does Iran have in 2026 and is it enough for a bomb?
As of mid-2026, Iran is estimated to hold approximately 540 kg of Highly Enriched Uranium enriched to 60%. A single nuclear weapon requires roughly 15-20 kg of uranium enriched to 90% (weapons-grade). Iran's 60% stockpile is not directly weapons-grade, but the technical step from 60% to 90% is significantly shorter than the earlier steps in the enrichment process.Source: IAEA Board of Governors report May 2026
What is highly enriched uranium and why does it matter for nuclear weapons?
HEU is uranium with more than 20% of the fissile isotope U-235. Weapons-grade material runs above 90%. Iran's 60%-enriched stockpile sits two-thirds of the way there; further enrichment is technically straightforward once so much separative work has been done.Source: IAEA safeguards glossary
Why is Iran's uranium stockpile blocking the 2026 nuclear deal?
The US demands full removal of the stockpile from Iran; Iran's Supreme Leader ordered it to stay on 21 May. Trump barred Russia and China as custodians on 27 May. The impasse was unresolved when the 28 May MOU deferred the question to a separate 60-day Phase 2.Source: event
What is the difference between reactor-grade and weapons-grade uranium?
Reactor fuel is enriched to 3-5% U-235. Weapons-grade runs above 90%. The IAEA classifies anything above 20% as HEU. Crucially, moving uranium from 3% to 20% takes FAR more separative work than the final step from 20% to 90%, so a 60%-enriched stockpile is close to weapons-ready in practical terms.Source: IAEA significant quantity definition
Can Iran make a nuclear bomb from its current stockpile?
The IAEA considers 25 kg of 90%-enriched uranium the minimum for one device. Iran's 440-540 kg at 60% represents many multiples of that threshold in latent potential. The remaining technical step to weapons-grade is comparatively small once enrichment has reached 60%.Source: event
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