Asia → Europe corridor · live voyage risk

🇻🇳 Ho Chi Minh City → Rotterdam 🇳🇱

Vietnam’s Ho Chi Minh City to Rotterdam — a fast-growing Southeast Asia–North Europe lane carrying manufacturing shifted out of China, straight through the Red Sea corridor.

55/100
Elevated risk
100% data confidence · 11 live signals

Last computed 2026-06-29 · Risk signals from ArcNautical's voyage engine · data confidence 100% · refreshed weekly. This score moves with conditions on the lane.

Distance
8,591 nm
Transit (est. @ 14 kn)
~25.6 days
Chokepoints crossed
5
Live sea-state (max)
0 m / 25 kt
Route: 🇻🇳 Ho Chi Minh City Singapore StraitMalacca StraitAndaman SeaSri Lanka SouthGulf of AdenBab el-MandebRed SeaSuez CanalStrait of GibraltarEnglish Channel 🇳🇱 Rotterdam

Current status · last computed 2026-06-29 · weekly

Elevated risk. Active war-risk / piracy exposure on the Red Sea approaches — confirm whether the carrier is still routing via Suez or has diverted around the Cape.

Why this lane scores Elevated — the 11 signals

ArcNautical's voyage engine composites eleven independent intelligence signals along the actual sea route, then weights each by how much it is driving risk on this corridor right now. Bar width = current severity of that signal; the percentage = its share of the composite score.

JWC Listed Areas 15% of score
Route transits 3 JWC listed area(s): Libya, Gulf of Aden and Indian Ocean (HRA), Red Sea and Bab el-Mandeb severity 74/100 · 3 signals
Piracy Incidents 14% of score
9 piracy incident(s) within 100nm of route severity 42/100 · 9 signals
Conflict Events 12% of score
42 conflict events within 200nm: 28 armed conflict(s), 14 military incident(s) | Auto-detected conflict zone(s): East Mediterranean (auto-detected), Conflict Zone (53°N 3°W) (auto-detected) severity 100/100 · 42 signals
Marine Weather 11% of score
Light to moderate seas: 0.0m waves, 25kt winds | Seasonal: Arabian Sea monsoon/cyclone season (1.6x baseline risk, June) severity 74/100 · 5 signals
Sanctions Exposure 8% of score
Transit through YE (OFAC, EU, UNSC); Transit through SO (OFAC, EU, UNSC); Transit through LY (EU, UNSC) severity 90/100 · 3 signals
Dark Activity 8% of score
129 dark activity event(s) within 80nm: 34 high, 91 medium severity 90/100 · 129 signals
Country Risk 8% of score
Route near 19 elevated-risk country/countries: VN, NL, SG, MY, ID, LK, YE, SO, SA, SD, EG, ES, MA, GB, FR, LY, IN, DZ, BE severity 23/100 · 19 signals
Natural Disasters 7% of score
1 disaster event(s) within 200nm: 1 earthquake severity 18/100 · 1 signal
Navigational Warnings 6% of score
No active navigational warnings near route severity 0/100
Chokepoint Disruption 6% of score
Route transits 3 chokepoint(s): Suez Canal (normal), Malacca Strait (normal), Bab el-Mandeb (normal) severity 0/100
AIS Disruptions 5% of score
No AIS disruptions near route severity 0/100

War-risk & piracy zones on this route

Listed-area intersections come from the Joint War Committee (JWC) hull-war zones, tested against the route geometry — not a country list. These are the areas underwriters load war-risk premium for.

9 recent piracy / armed-robbery incidents logged within 100 nm of the route (most recent: other near the Strait of Malacca).

Sanctions exposure on the corridor

This route runs 14% of its distance through sanctioned waters. A leg inside a sanctioned EEZ is where AIS-gap, dark-STS and shadow-fleet activity concentrate — the geography compliance teams have to be able to defend.

Route transits 3 sanctioned EEZ(s): Yemen [OFAC, UNSC] (6%), Libya [UNSC] (5%), Federal Republic of Somalia [OFAC, UNSC] (3%). 17 other EEZ(s): Indonesia (6%), Sri Lanka (5%), Egypt (5%), Andaman and Nicobar (5%), Eritrea (4%), Maldives (4%), Halaib Triangle (4%), Malaysia (4%), France (3%), Vietnam (3%), United Kingdom (1%), Netherlands (1%), Morocco (1%), Algeria (1%), Djibouti (0%), Singapore (0%), Belgium (0%)

Geography is only half the question. Before you fix the cargo, screen the specific vessel and its ownership chain against OFAC / EU / UN / UK lists:

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Score your actual Ho Chi Minh City → Rotterdam voyage

This profile is the corridor baseline. Run the live scorer with your vessel, load condition, speed and departure date for a voyage-specific risk read, a Monte-Carlo ETA distribution, and a downloadable report.

Open the live voyage scorer →

Freight platforms price this lane. ArcNautical tells you what could go wrong on it.

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FAQ

Is the Ho Chi Minh City to Rotterdam shipping route high risk?

ArcNautical scores it 55/100 — Elevated risk. The largest drivers are JWC Listed Areas, Piracy Incidents, Conflict Events. The route crosses Libya and Gulf of Aden and Indian Ocean (HRA) and Red Sea and Bab el-Mandeb, and runs 14% of its distance through sanctioned waters.

Which chokepoints does the Ho Chi Minh City–Rotterdam route cross?

Singapore Strait, Malacca Strait, Bab el-Mandeb, Suez Canal, Strait of Gibraltar. Total distance 8,591 nautical miles, roughly 26 days at 14 knots.

How much longer is the Ho Chi Minh City to Rotterdam route if ships avoid the Red Sea?

Routing via the Suez Canal is about 26 days at 14 knots. Diverting around the Cape of Good Hope to avoid the Red Sea / Bab-el-Mandeb adds roughly 2,693 nautical miles and 8 extra days — about 34 days end to end.

Does the Ho Chi Minh City to Rotterdam route pass through sanctioned waters?

Route transits 3 sanctioned EEZ(s): Yemen [OFAC, UNSC] (6%), Libya [UNSC] (5%), Federal Republic of Somalia [OFAC, UNSC] (3%). 17 other EEZ(s): Indonesia (6%), Sri Lanka (5%), Egypt (5%), Andaman and Nicobar (5%), Eritrea (4%), Maldives (4%), Halaib Triangle (4%), Malaysia (4%), France (3%), Vietnam (3%), United Kingdom (1%), Netherlands (1%), Morocco (1%), Algeria (1%), Djibouti (0%), Singapore (0%), Belgium (0%)