Panama Canal Transit Fees Skyrocket to Record Highs Amidst Hormuz Strait Crisis
Ana Fernanda Reporter
| 2026-04-25 04:40:38
PANAMA CITY — The ongoing conflict in the Middle East, and the resulting closure of the Strait of Hormuz, has triggered a seismic shift in global maritime logistics, sending transit fees at the Panama Canal to unprecedented record highs. As one of the world’s most vital trade arteries, the canal has become a bottleneck for global energy markets, as Asian nations scramble to secure alternative sources of oil and gas.
With the Persian Gulf effectively paralyzed, countries such as South Korea and Japan have drastically increased their imports from the U.S. Gulf Coast. Given that the Panama Canal serves as the shortest maritime route connecting the Gulf of Mexico to the Asian market, it has experienced a sudden and overwhelming influx of traffic.
Data from the region indicates that daily auctions for canal passage slots are now attracting five times the number of bids compared to pre-war levels. The price surge is staggering: the average cost for a transit slot for a Panamax-class vessel has climbed to approximately $837,500. According to energy data analysts at Argus Media, this figure represents a tenfold increase in costs since the conflict began.
While many shipping companies manage to secure transit slots through pre-arranged, lower-cost reservations, these only account for about 70% of total traffic. The remaining 30% are handled through daily auctions, which have become a battleground for urgency. In desperate efforts to bypass the rising congestion, some shipping firms have paid as much as $4 million for a single transit slot.
The logistical strain is becoming increasingly evident on the water, where tanker waiting times have reached an average of 4.25 days—a six-week high. For major container ships and LPG carriers that rely on the canal for their operations, these delays represent not just a financial burden, but a critical threat to the stability of energy supply chains across the Pacific. As the geopolitical situation remains volatile, the Panama Canal continues to bear the heavy burden of being the primary lifeline for global energy, with experts warning that transit costs may remain elevated as long as the crisis in the Middle East persists.
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