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Lloyd's of London
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Lloyd's of London

The world's specialist insurance market; P&I clubs have suspended war-risk cover for Gulf vessels since UKMTO hit critical tier.

Last refreshed: 20 June 2026 · Appears in 3 active topics

Key Question

Has Lloyd's war-risk cover actually reopened the Strait of Hormuz for shipping?

Timeline for Lloyd's of London

#13319 Jun

Launched a Chubb-led $400m marine war-risk consortium for Hormuz transits on 19 June

Iran Conflict 2026: Hormuz cover returned before the strait did
#1018 Jun

Maintained war-risk designation on Hormuz that historically takes years to unwind

European Oil Markets: Freight prices Hormuz risk as permanent
View full timeline →
Common Questions
What is Lloyd's of London?
Lloyd's of London is a specialist insurance and reinsurance marketplace founded in 1688. It is not a single insurer but a market where competing syndicates underwrite exceptional and catastrophic risks, including marine war risk, aviation, and natural catastrophe cover.Source: Lloyd's
How has the Iran conflict affected Lloyd's war risk premiums?
Since the opening of Operation Epic Fury, Lloyd's syndicates have sharply repriced war risk cover for vessels in the Persian Gulf and Strait of Hormuz. Iran's formal threat to mine all Gulf access routes triggered the most significant marine war risk repricing since the 1980s Tanker War.Source: Iran's Defence Council statement
What is marine war risk insurance?
Marine war risk insurance covers vessels against damage or loss caused by war, mines, terrorism, and hostile seizure. Separate from standard hull cover, it is priced daily and can be withdrawn or repriced within 48 hours when underwriters judge a zone too dangerous.Source: Lloyd's

Background

Lloyd's of London is a specialist insurance and reinsurance market founded in 1688 in a London coffee house. It is not a single company but a marketplace where competing syndicates underwrite risk. Regulated by the Prudential Regulation Authority, Lloyd's remains the global reference point for novel and catastrophic risk, including aviation, satellite, cyber, and marine war risk. Its P&I clubs, mutual insurance associations for shipping operators, are a distinct but interconnected layer of the market that cover liability and hull risk.

Since the opening of the Iran conflict, Lloyd's syndicates have repriced War risk coverage for vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz and the broader Persian Gulf. On 4 May 2026, UK Maritime Trade Operations (UKMTO) upgraded the Hormuz commercial shipping advisory to its critical tier after recording 41 vessel incidents in ten weeks, the first maximum-level escalation since the conflict opened. Lloyd's P&I clubs extended their war-risk cover suspensions in parallel, raising the effective insurance floor for commercial vessels attempting transit without naval escort . The Joint War Committee (JWC) required written rules of engagement from either the Coalition or the PGSA before war-risk cover could reopen, a condition neither had published as of late May .

On 19 June 2026, Lloyd's launched a Chubb-led marine war-risk consortium offering $200m of hull capacity, $200m of P&I cover, and $200m of cargo capacity, a total of $400m, for vessels crossing the Strait of Hormuz. Chief of markets Patrick Tiernan said the facility was available to brokers immediately, subject to underwriting and sanctions screening. It is the first substantive return of private war-risk capacity since the International Group of P&I Clubs withdrew cover at the conflict's outset . The sanctions-screening condition means every covered cargo must comply with existing OFAC restrictions, tying the consortium to the same waiver the MOU promised but had not delivered. The Lloyd's Market Association separately noted that safety, not insurance, remained the binding constraint: the navigable channel was uncleared, no minesweeping had been reported, and tracking data showed zero completed eastbound transits by 20 June.

The shadow-fleet seizure of the Ethera in European waters by Belgium and France tightened Lloyd's underwriting appetite for opaque vessel registries, compounding the Gulf exposure. The two crises together, Russian shadow fleet evasion and Iranian Hormuz disruption, have forced Lloyd's syndicates to reassess the entire global marine war risk portfolio simultaneously, a level of concurrent geopolitical exposure not seen since the 1980s Tanker War.

More questions
How does Lloyd's of London differ from a normal insurance company?
Lloyd's is a marketplace, not a single company. Individual syndicates, backed by members called Names, each take a share of a risk. This structure allows Lloyd's to underwrite risks no single insurer could carry, such as entire Gulf shipping lanes during an active conflict.Source: Lloyd's
Can Lloyd's refuse to insure ships through the Strait of Hormuz?
Yes. Lloyd's syndicates can withdraw war risk cover or price it prohibitively at short notice. If cover becomes unavailable, ships cannot legally operate in the zone under most national maritime laws, effectively closing the route without any government order to do so.Source: Lloyd's market practice
What did Lloyd's of London do when UKMTO raised the Hormuz alert to critical?
Lloyd's P&I clubs extended their war-risk cover suspensions in parallel with the UKMTO critical tier upgrade on 4 May 2026, raising the effective insurance floor for commercial vessels attempting Hormuz transit without naval escort.Source: UKMTO / Lloyd's P&I clubs
How much has Lloyd's of London raised Gulf shipping insurance premiums in 2026?
Premiums on Persian Gulf voyages have risen sharply since the conflict opened, with specific figures varying by vessel type and route. The broader signal is the P&I club suspension: carriers without naval escort cannot obtain war-risk cover at any price.Source: Lloyd's market reports
Can ships still get insurance to sail through the Strait of Hormuz?
Lloyd's P&I clubs suspended war-risk cover in May 2026 for vessels transiting without naval escort. Ships joining CENTCOM's escort corridor can obtain restricted cover, but the standard commercial insurance market has withdrawn for unescorted transits.Source: Lloyd's / CENTCOM
Why does Iran want Lloyd's to raise shipping insurance premiums?
Iran threatened to mine all Gulf access routes partly to drive war risk premiums to prohibitive levels, making commercial shipping through Hormuz economically unviable regardless of military access. Higher premiums are the economic lever parallel to the physical blockade.Source: Iran Defence Council statement
Why did Lloyd's of London suspend Gulf shipping insurance?
Lloyd's P&I clubs suspended war-risk cover for vessels transiting the Strait of Hormuz without naval escort after UKMTO raised its Hormuz advisory to critical tier on 4 May 2026, following 41 vessel incidents in ten weeks. The suspension raised the effective insurance floor for commercial transits.Source: UKMTO / Lloyd's P&I clubs
What is Lloyd's Joint War Committee and what does it do?
The Joint War Committee (JWC) is a Lloyd's advisory body that designates high-risk zones for marine war-risk underwriting. When a zone is listed, war-risk cover either requires 48 hours' notice before entry or is suspended entirely. The JWC currently requires written rules of engagement from the Coalition or PGSA before it will reopen Hormuz war-risk cover.Source: Lloyd's JWC
Why did oil prices fall 5% on 20 May but the Strait of Hormuz was nearly empty?
Brent fell 5.16% to $105.54 on 20 May 2026 on diplomatic optimism about US-Iran negotiations, but Windward's tracker logged only 2 commercial Hormuz transits on the same day against a pre-crisis baseline of ~95. The financial market priced a probability the physical waterway had not yet honoured.Source: Fortune / Windward
What is marine war risk insurance and can it be withdrawn quickly?
Marine war risk insurance covers vessels against damage or loss from war, mines, terrorism, and hostile seizure. It is priced daily and can be withdrawn or repriced within 48 hours when underwriters judge a zone too dangerous. Lloyd's JWC designations drive those withdrawal decisions for the Hormuz zone.Source: Lloyd's market practice