Fresh details emerging from a reported draft agreement between the United States and Iran indicate that both sides are discussing a phased framework involving sanctions relief, restoration of maritime navigation in the Strait of Hormuz and easing restrictions on Iranian oil exports.

According to details circulating from diplomatic and regional sources, the draft agreement reportedly includes a 30-day period for the restoration of navigation in the strategically vital Strait of Hormuz, one of the world’s most important global energy shipping routes.

The proposed framework also reportedly states that any easing of sanctions on Iranian oil exports would remain conditional on Tehran implementing its commitments under the agreement. The draft further outlines a phased approach to sanctions relief rather than immediate removal of restrictions.

Under the reported proposal, Iran could receive specific exemptions related to oil exports while broader sanctions are eased gradually in stages linked to compliance benchmarks. The draft agreement also reportedly includes an American commitment to ease restrictions and blockade-related measures affecting Iranian ports.

The developments come amid intensified diplomatic engagement between Washington and Tehran over Iran’s nuclear programme, regional security concerns and maritime tensions in the Gulf region.

Earlier, US President Donald Trump had stated that negotiations with Iran were progressing in a “constructive and orderly manner,” while insisting that Tehran would not be allowed to develop nuclear weapons. Trump also said that the existing blockade and sanctions pressure would remain in place until a final agreement was formally signed and certified.

At the same time, Iranian officials have maintained a defiant position. Senior figures in Tehran recently declared there would be “no surrender or retreat” despite mounting international pressure and ongoing negotiations.

The Strait of Hormuz remains a critical geopolitical chokepoint through which nearly one-fifth of global oil shipments pass. Any disruption in the region has immediate implications for global crude prices, energy markets and international shipping.

Diplomatic observers say the draft framework suggests attempts by both sides to balance economic incentives with verification mechanisms and regional security guarantees. However, officials from neither Washington nor Tehran have publicly confirmed the full details of the reported draft agreement.

The proposed phased sanctions relief mechanism is being closely watched by global energy markets, particularly because Iran holds some of the world’s largest oil and gas reserves. A relaxation of export restrictions could significantly impact international crude supply and pricing dynamics.

The negotiations are also unfolding against the backdrop of heightened tensions involving Israel, Gulf nations and wider Middle East security concerns, making the outcome of the talks geopolitically significant beyond bilateral US-Iran relations.

Further diplomatic rounds are expected in the coming days as negotiators continue discussions over nuclear commitments, sanctions relief and regional maritime security arrangements.