Maritime intelligence firm Windward logged 13 Strait of Hormuz crossings on 28 April 2026, up from 9 on 24 April , comprising 3 inbound and 10 outbound vessels. One outbound vessel ran AIS (Automatic Identification System) dark, with its transponder switched off in a pattern the maritime trade reads as deliberate concealment. The Windward daily, sourced from satellite AIS feeds and proprietary shipping intelligence, is the most granular public record of Hormuz tempo during the blockade.
CENTCOM (US Central Command) logged 37 vessels redirected per the 25 April US forces statement on the Windward read, a downward revision from the 38 vessels counted in the 27 April reporting . The discrepancy may be a US forces revision rather than a real decline; the figure is bracketed pending the next CENTCOM statement. The Windward-sourced clarification on LPG SEVAN corrects the seizure framing carried in : the OFAC-sourced record names the vessel as sanctioned on 25 April among 19 shadow-fleet tankers, not seized at sea. OFAC (Office of Foreign Assets Control) is the Treasury bureau that administers economic sanctions; the 25 April designation was a list-rather-than-takedown action.
Iran is drafting a bilateral transit protocol with Oman to oversee Strait of Hormuz passage , and Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi told Sultan Haitham in Muscat on 26 April that any reopening must run through Tehran's terms . The 28 April rise to 13 transits sits inside that diplomatic envelope, not outside it. Three inbound versus ten outbound implies cargo running out faster than freight running in, with shadow-fleet operators clearing existing positions before any 1 May reset. The single AIS-dark outbound continues a baseline opacity rate Windward reported running at roughly 13 per cent on 24 April ; concealment tracks with the OFAC shadow-fleet designation and the wider sanctions architecture pressuring Iranian cargo carriers.
CENTCOM has logged 37 vessels redirected over the blockade and reframed the LPG SEVAN status from seizure to sanction inside three days, the tightest correction interval since the operation opened on 28 February. Brent at $111.16 sets the price record running alongside the operational tempo, and Windward's daily Hormuz transit count carries the only granular public ledger sitting between the two.
