Iran Launches Hormuz Safe, Claims $10B Revenue – Bitcoin News
Key Takeaways
Iran’s Ministry of Economy reportedly launched Hormuz Safe on May 16, 2026, targeting $10B in annual revenue.Hormuz Safe will ostensibly settle maritime insurance policies in bitcoin, raising U.S. sanctions compliance concerns for cargo operators.The platform covers Persian Gulf and Strait of Hormuz transits, with policy terms and war-damage exclusions still evolving.
Fars News Reports Iran Has Launched Hormuz Safe, a Bitcoin-Based Maritime Insurance Platform for Strait of Hormuz Shipping
The story started gathering virality on social media Sunday evening after 4 p.m. ET, with users sharing screenshots of the platform’s landing page at hormuzsafe.ir. Fars News Agency, an IRGC-affiliated Iranian state media outlet, published the originating report on May 16, 2026, citing a document obtained from the Ministry of Economy.
According to Fars News, the ministry had been pursuing the insurance plan since early Ordibehesht, the Persian calendar month that began in late April 2026. The platform reportedly issues fast, cryptographically verifiable insurance policies for maritime cargo passing through the Persian Gulf, the Strait of Hormuz, and surrounding waterways.
Payments are allegedly settled in bitcoin. Fars News states that from the moment of blockchain confirmation, cargo is covered, and a signed digital receipt is provided to the owner. The outlet frames the initiative as a sovereign Iranian tool for asserting financial control over one of the world’s most critical oil shipping chokepoints.
The Strait of Hormuz handles an estimated 20% of global oil trade. Iran has periodically threatened to close it during periods of heightened regional tension, and if the Hormuz Safe platform comes to fruition, it could give Tehran a financial mechanism to monetize passage rather than simply block it.
The revenue figure cited in Fars News stands at more than $10 billion. No breakdown of how that number was calculated appears in the originating article. The platform is brand new, and full technical and legal specifications have not been publicly disclosed.
Western compliance experts and U.S. government advisories have long warned that payments to Iranian entities, including state-backed financial platforms, may trigger sanctions violations under the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC). Operators considering use of the platform would reportedly need to consult legal and sanctions counsel before engaging.
The platform’s website shows a “Coming Soon” or landing page as of the time of this report. Details are likely to evolve quickly given how recently the initiative was announced. Some Fars News reader comments expressed skepticism about whether revenue from the platform would benefit ordinary Iranians or remain under state control.
Separate from any geopolitical analysis, cybersecurity professionals have noted that prior crypto scams have impersonated Iranian government authorities, ostensibly collecting “safe passage” fees from vessel operators. Hormuz Safe appears to be a distinct, state-sanctioned initiative, but crypto safe passage scams have proliferated since the start of the war.
Iran has increasingly turned to cryptocurrency and blockchain tools in recent years as a way to conduct cross-border commerce outside the traditional dollar-denominated financial system. Bitcoin, in particular, has been referenced in Iranian state media as a mechanism for bypassing sanctions-related restrictions on dollar transactions.
Kurdistan24 and Iran International were among other international outlets that picked up the Fars News report and began circulating it. Each outlet cited the originating Fars piece, which was authored by Fatemeh Sadeghi and timestamped at 20:44 Tehran time on May 16, 2026. Reports of using bitcoin, stablecoins, and China’s yuan for safe passage through Hormuz started appearing at the start of April.
The geopolitical framing within the Fars article is notable. It suggests the platform’s launch is being positioned by Iranian state media as a response to ongoing regional pressures.
Whether Hormuz Safe becomes an operational insurance market or remains a state-media announcement or rumor is not yet clear. What the report has established is that Iran’s government is publicly framing bitcoin as a tool for asserting sovereign control over a critical piece of global maritime infrastructure.
