Salalah Free Zone has broken annual export records in 2026, cementing Oman’s southern logistics hub as a critical node in global supply chains connecting Asia, Africa and Europe — with major international manufacturers and logistics operators accelerating investment in the zone to capitalise on Salalah Port’s deep-water facilities and its unique position outside the Strait of Hormuz.
The free zone, located adjacent to Salalah Port — Oman’s largest container terminal — operates under a zero-tax, zero-customs framework that has attracted companies from more than 60 countries, spanning manufacturing, logistics, food processing and petrochemical sectors. Zone occupancy reached a record high in 2026, prompting the expansion of industrial land allocation and warehouse facilities.
Strategic Location Beyond Hormuz
Salalah’s location on Oman’s southern coast — facing the Arabian Sea rather than the Gulf — gives it a rare advantage among GCC logistics hubs: it sits entirely outside the Strait of Hormuz, making it a preferred option for global shippers and manufacturers seeking supply chain resilience and routing flexibility independent of the main Gulf shipping lane.
This positioning has attracted growing interest from Asian manufacturers using Salalah as a gateway to African markets, and from European and North American logistics operators seeking Indian Ocean connectivity without dependence on the Suez Canal route. Salalah Port’s handling capacity is rated among the top 50 globally, with direct connections to over 40 major international ports.
Oman’s Logistics Vision 2040
Salalah Free Zone’s growth is central to Oman’s Vision 2040 logistics strategy, which targets the country becoming one of the top 25 logistics hubs globally by 2040. The government is investing in rail connectivity between Salalah and Muscat, expanded cold chain infrastructure for food and pharmaceutical products, and digital port management systems to reduce cargo handling times.
For businesses seeking a GCC manufacturing or distribution base that combines cost efficiency, strategic Indian Ocean access and a stable regulatory environment, Salalah Free Zone represents one of the most compelling investment cases in the Gulf — and one that remains underappreciated relative to Dubai’s JAFZA or Abu Dhabi’s KEZAD.
Also Read: GCC Economy to Grow 4.4% in 2026: Oxford Economics Forecasts Credit Boom



