how much oil does the us get from iran
The United States currently imports essentially no crude oil directly from Iran , and has not done so in any meaningful, regular way for decades due to sanctions and legal restrictions.
Quick Scoop: Core Answer
- U.S. crude oil imports from Iran are effectively zero in recent years.
- This is because U.S. law and sanctions largely prohibit buying Iranian oil, so Iran’s barrels mostly go to other countries (especially in Asia) instead.
- Any trade that does occur is small, indirect, and not in the form of large, regular oil shipments to the U.S.
What the official data shows
- U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) historical tables for “U.S. Imports from Iran of Crude Oil” show no sustained imports for many years, with only scattered, tiny values appearing in older data, and none in recent years.
- A related EIA table for “Crude Oil and Petroleum Products” shows some imports in the 1970s and early 1980s but then drops off, with no ongoing current flow.
- Trade statistics sites report only a few million dollars of total U.S. imports from Iran in 2024, which is extremely small relative to the U.S. oil market and may be non‑oil goods.
Mini takeaway
If you’re picturing U.S. tankers routinely pulling into American ports loaded with Iranian crude: that’s not what’s happening now.
Why doesn’t the U.S. buy Iranian oil?
- Long‑standing U.S. sanctions on Iran’s energy sector restrict or ban the purchase of Iranian crude and many petroleum products.
- After the Iranian Revolution and subsequent crises, U.S. policy steadily cut direct energy trade; later nuclear‑related sanctions tightened this further.
- In practice, Iran’s main oil buyers today are countries like China, with some flows (official or gray‑market) to other Asian buyers, not the U.S.
But Iran still matters for U.S. oil prices
Even though the U.S. doesn’t get much oil from Iran, Iran still affects what Americans pay at the pump.
- Iran is an important OPEC producer, and disruptions to its exports can tighten global supply, pushing up prices for everyone.
- Analysts recently warned that conflict involving Iran could send benchmark prices sharply higher, even though U.S. refiners are not directly buying Iranian barrels.
- The big risk is the Strait of Hormuz: any threat there can spook markets because a large share of world seaborne oil flows through that chokepoint.
In other words: the U.S. doesn’t import Iranian oil, but the U.S. economy still feels it when Iranian oil is disrupted.
Forum‑style angle and “latest news” vibe
Recent coverage has focused less on U.S. imports (which are near zero) and more on how tensions with Iran could hit global markets.
- Some reports highlight China’s “oil dilemma” as it shifts from Iranian to more Russian crude amid U.S.–Iran friction.
- Market commentary speculates on scenarios where conflict or sanctions enforcement removes more Iranian barrels from the global market, driving prices potentially above 100 dollars per barrel in a worst case.
- Online discussions often frame this as: “Even if the U.S. doesn’t buy from Iran, why do gas prices still jump every time there’s news from the Gulf?”—the answer is that oil is priced on a global market, so everyone feels the shock.
TL;DR: The U.S. currently gets essentially no oil from Iran because of sanctions and laws, but Iran still matters a lot for global oil prices and therefore U.S. gas prices.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.