According to the Central Statistics Agency (BPS), Indonesia imported 37.75 million tons of oil products in 2025, with a total value of US$23.46 billion.
These oil products follow the 2020 Indonesian Standard Classification of Business Activities (KBLI), which includes fuel oil for vehicles, such as gasoline, diesel, aviation fuel, and various other refined petroleum products.
In 2025, Singapore became the largest supplier of oil products to Indonesia, accounting for about 39% of the total national import volume.
Indonesia also imported a significant amount of oil products from the Middle East region in 2025, particularly from the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Kuwait, and Bahrain.
Combined, these five Middle Eastern countries accounted for about 14% of Indonesia's total oil product import volume.
Here are the details of Indonesia's oil product import volume by supplier country in 2025:
- Singapore: 14.63 million tons (38.8% of Indonesia's total oil product import volume)
- Malaysia: 7.84 million tons (20.8%)
- United Arab Emirates: 1.73 million tons (4.6%)
- Saudi Arabia: 1.58 million tons (4.2%)
- Qatar: 1.33 million tons (3.5%)
- China: 830,100 tons (2.2%)
- Kuwait: 462,200 tons (1.2%)
- South Korea: 360,200 tons (1%)
- Bahrain: 270,400 tons (0.7%)
- India: 202,000 tons (0.5%)
- Other countries: 8.51 million tons (22.5%)
However, the supply of oil from the Middle East in 2026 could potentially be disrupted. This is because earlier this year, Iran blocked the Strait of Hormuz, a major route for oil shipments from the Middle East.
Iran carried out the blockade after the US and Israel attacked its territory in late February 2026.
"The strait is closed. If anyone tries to pass through it, the Revolutionary Guard and the navy will burn those ships," said Ebrahim Jabari, a senior adviser to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), as reported by Al Jazeera on March 2, 2026.