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Hormuz-bypass routing

Sohar Port to Kuwait — Hormuz-bypass multimodal routing

From Sohar Port on the Gulf of Oman — outside the Strait of Hormuz — overland through UAE and Saudi Arabia into Kuwait. The fastest of the Hormuz-bypass options for Asia-origin cargo in May 2026.

May 2026 routing notice: Strait of Hormuz traffic is operating at roughly 5% of normal volumes. We are actively routing inbound cargo through this corridor as an alternative. Read the full Hormuz-alternatives playbook →

Sea leg

18–28 days (Asia)

Port-to-port. Outside Hormuz transit.

Land leg to Kuwait

6–9 days

Truck via bonded TIR corridor.

Total door-to-door

24–32 days

End-to-end including customs.

Why this routing matters right now

Sohar Port handles 940,000+ TEU per year and is jointly operated by Asyad (Oman) and Port of Rotterdam — among the most operationally competent ports in the Gulf. Crucially, it sits east of the Musandam peninsula, so vessels reach it without ever entering the Strait of Hormuz.

For Kuwait importers in May 2026, that geography matters more than any other single factor. With Hormuz traffic running at roughly 5% of normal volumes since the war began in late February, Sohar has absorbed major rerouted volume. Most major shipping lines now offer direct Asia-to-Sohar services explicitly for onward GCC distribution.

The land leg from Sohar to Kuwait crosses two borders — Oman/UAE at Al Buraimi/Al Ain (~280 km from Sohar), then UAE/Saudi via Ghuwaifat (~480 km), then Saudi/Kuwait via Al-Khafji/Al-Nuwaiseeb (~1,200 km). The full truck leg is around 1,950 km. Bonded TIR Carnet cargo passes through under seal without re-inspection at intermediate borders, which is why this is a 6–9 day land leg and not a 2-week one.

See the full breakdown in our Hormuz alternatives playbook.

Indicative rates — May 2026

Rates have moved sharply in 2026 Q1–Q2 due to Hormuz disruption, Red Sea routing, and Emergency Conflict Surcharges. The ranges below are directional only. Get a current quote before committing — real numbers move week to week.

Origin portModeSea legLand legIndicative rate
Shanghai (CNSHA)40ft FCL~18–22d~7dGet current quote
Ningbo (CNNGB)40ft FCL~18–22d~7dGet current quote
Shenzhen (CNSZX)40ft FCL~20–24d~7dGet current quote
Mumbai / Nhava Sheva (INNSA)40ft FCL~8–12d~7dGet current quote
Chennai (INMAA)40ft FCL~10–14d~7dGet current quote
Various Asia originsLCL per CBMvaries~7dGet current quote
Most Asia originsAir freight to KWI3–7dn/aNote: air to KWI not affected by Hormuz

Last reviewed: May 2026. Currency: USD. Rates exclude Kuwait Customs duty (typically 5% of CIF customs value) and last-mile delivery within Kuwait.

The routing in detail

Sea leg: Most major lines (Maersk, MSC, CMA CGM, ONE, ZIM, Hapag-Lloyd) operate Asia–Sohar direct or with one transhipment. The port is calling-grade modern infrastructure with cross-docking to bonded trucks.

Land bridge crossings:

Why not just send everything sea-direct still? Three reasons: vessel availability into Hormuz is constrained, war-risk insurance pass-through has tripled the cost line, and schedule reliability has deteriorated. The land bridge is more predictable, often cheaper, and frequently faster end-to-end.

Customs, documents and TIR

Kuwait Customs applies the standard 5% duty on CIF customs value for general goods under the GCC Common External Tariff. The documentation set for a Sohar-routed shipment is identical to a Shuwaikh-direct shipment, with two additions:

The Kuwait Customs declaration happens at the Khafji crossing on the truck arrival, not at Sohar on the vessel arrival. Practically: same paperwork as before, slightly different timing in the workflow.

Sector approvals (KUCAS, PAAFR for food, MoH for cosmetics and pharma) must be in place before cargo loads at origin — unchanged from sea-direct routing.

Full duty rate guide → by HS chapter

When this is the right choice (and when it isn't)

This route is the right choice when:

It's the wrong choice when:

Common mistakes:

Frequently asked questions

Is Sohar really outside the Strait of Hormuz?

Yes — Sohar Port sits on the Gulf of Oman, east of the Musandam peninsula. Vessels reach it from the Indian Ocean side without ever entering the strait. This is the structural advantage of the routing.

How does the cost compare to sea-direct to Shuwaikh right now?

Comparable or slightly cheaper once you include the Emergency Conflict Surcharges (around USD 3,000 per 40ft) and war-risk insurance pass-through that current Hormuz-direct quotes carry. The land-leg cost is offset by lower sea-leg cost. Real numbers move week to week — get a current quote.

Can you handle the full door-to-door?

Yes. We coordinate the sea booking, Sohar discharge and bonded transfer, all three border crossings, and the final last-mile delivery into Kuwait. One Kuwait-based contact for the whole journey.

What about LCL — does it work for less-than-container shipments?

Yes, with consolidators operating regular Sohar discharges from Asia origins. LCL transit times are 2–4 days longer than FCL because of the consolidation/deconsolidation steps but otherwise the same model.

Is this routing temporary or here to stay?

Some volume will return to Hormuz-direct when the strait reopens normally. But the multimodal land-bridge model has been growing for resilience reasons since well before this conflict, and most major shipping lines have invested in Sohar/Khorfakkan capacity that won't be wound back. For Kuwait importers, having a working land-bridge relationship is now table stakes regardless of when Hormuz fully reopens.

What if Sohar's capacity gets constrained?

Same model works via Khorfakkan/Fujairah (UAE, also outside Hormuz) or Salalah/Duqm (Oman, further south). We route across whichever has the capacity that week.

Ready to quote your Sohar → Kuwait shipment?

Tell us origin port, cargo description and weight or volume. We come back within 4 business hours with an itemised quote across viable routings.

Related routes & references