IRAN
Natanz
Isfahan
PLAYDASH Media
June 4, 2026
IRAN
Natanz
Isfahan
Fordo
Where Is Iran’s Highly Enriched Uranium?
Stored deep underground, most likely in multiple locations, Iran’s uranium stockpile is among the biggest uncertainties surrounding any peace deal.
By Samuel Granados and Yeganeh Torbati June 3, 2026
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President Trump has vowed to prevent Iran from getting a nuclear weapon — and central to that pledge is the fate of its highly enriched uranium, which could be used to build at least 10 bombs.
Much of the uranium is believed to be stored so far underground that even powerful U.S. bunker-buster bombs may not be able to destroy it. A raid by U.S. forces to retrieve the uranium would carry enormous risks, including from the material itself, which could become highly toxic if it were to leak and be exposed to moisture.
The Trump administration is now focusing on diplomatic efforts by trying to convince Iran to turn over the material in return for incentives.
“Iran is being sanctioned because they have highly enriched uranium, Iran is being sanctioned because of their nuclear activities,” said U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, while testifying Tuesday at a Senate Committee on Foreign Relations. “If they agree to give up those things, there will be sanctions relief associated with their commitment and compliance with those agreements.”
Iran had a stockpile of about 970 pounds of uranium enriched to 60 percent as of June 2025, the International Atomic Energy Agency, or I.A.E.A., said in February. The material is often stored in canisters about the size of scuba tanks, allowing the stockpile to be split among several locations.
It is impossible to know exactly where Iran’s nuclear material is stored without full I.A.E.A. inspections. Here’s a look at where experts believe it may be, and why it would be so difficult to retrieve.
A deep complex at Isfahan
Buried
entrances
Tunnel
complex
New
roadblocks
nuclear complex
New roadblocks
Isfahan nuclear
Most of Iran’s enriched uranium likely remains stored underground, near the Isfahan nuclear complex, according to Rafael Grossi, who leads the I.A.E.A. The material would require only a few weeks of processing to be usable for a nuclear weapon.
The complex is buried deep under a mountain, most likely beyond the reach of bunker-buster bombs, according to an analysis from the Jewish Institute for National Security of America, a Washington research organization.
When the United States briefly joined Israel in the 12-day war last year, its airstrikes heavily damaged the tunnel entrances to the Isfahan site. Satellite imagery suggests that an effort was made to clear debris from some of the entrances. But Iran covered them up with soil again early this year, apparently as a protective measure, before the most recent war began in February.
Images also show the addition of dirt barriers this year, which could be intended to defend against a ground operation, according to the Institute for Science and International Security, a research organization. Other new structures visible near one entrance may be shelters for defensive military equipment, said Sarah Burkhard, a senior researcher at the institute.
Activity at the site
April 8, 2026
New facility
believed
to be under this
mountain.
Aboveground facility
mostly destroyed
by airstrikes
Detail
Fresh roadblocks
Entrance
filled with
dirt
New structure
Detail 2
Detail 1
Mostly destroyed by airstrikes
Fresh
Freshly
excavated
Sources: Institute for Science and International Security; Times analysis of satellite images by Airbus. The New York Times
There is also limited visual evidence that Iran may have transferred enriched uranium into Isfahan, some analysts say. Before the 12-day war last June, satellite imagery from Airbus appeared to show a cargo truck near one of the complex's entrances. Its load resembled the containers used to carry nuclear material. The image was initially reported by Le Monde.
June 9, 2025
Loaded
truck
Crane
Source: Institute for Science and International Security; Satellite image by Airbus. The New York Times
Much remains uncertain. “There are a lot of unknowns about whether that material was the uranium or was just other chemicals involved in the metallurgy process that Iran wants to protect,” said Joseph Rodgers, a nuclear expert at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
Natanz, and nearby Pickaxe Mountain
Pickaxe
Mountain
struck
in 2026
Natanz nuclear
Enrichment hall
struck in 2025
New perimeter
wall
A smaller share of the highly enriched uranium may be at Natanz, Iran’s largest enrichment site, according to Mr. Grossi, the I.A.E.A. head.
The United States and Israel bombed Natanz in June 2025, causing severe damage. They attacked again in March, during the most recent war, and that might have been aimed at burying enriched uranium at the site, said Mr. Rodgers, the nuclear expert. Again, the fate of any uranium there is not known.
June 6, 2025
Before 12-day war
Entrance under
construction
Jan. 18, 2026
After 12-day war
Slab being covered
by earth mounds.
May 23
Last month
under
Slab being
covered by
earth mounds.
New entrance
under construction
Under the rubble of Fordo
Fordo nuclear site
Struck in June 2025
The underground Fordo site was effectively destroyed when U.S. forces struck it with a dozen bunker-buster bombs in June 2025. In recent weeks, satellite imagery has indicated that Iran has added obstacles on the roads leading to buried tunnel entrances, in what could be an effort to slow down a potential attack, according to the Institute for Science and International Security.
June 22, 2025
Debris
after strike
Facility under
this mountain
Ventilation
shafts targeted
May 22, 2026
New road
obstacles
Craters
covered
Sources: Institute for Science and International Security; U.S. Department of Defense; Times analysis of satellite images by Vantor (2025) and Airbus (2026). The New York Times
It is also possible that enriched uranium could be stored in a separate unknown location, in addition to Isfahan, Natanz and Fordo. That could make the retrieval or disposal of Iran’s stockpile even more challenging without the government’s cooperation, experts say.
“If Iran was worried about the U.S. or Israel or some combination coming in and trying to steal the material or remove it through military force, you would think that they would want to spread that out to different places,” said Scott Roecker, vice president of the nuclear materials security program at the Nuclear Threat Initiative, a Washington-based organization.
Iran also has more uranium than just its stocks enriched to 60 percent. In total, the country has more than 19,930 pounds of enriched uranium, according to the I.A.E.A.’s latest assessment, including 405 pounds enriched up to 20 percent and 13,280 pounds enriched up to 5 percent.
While it would take time to convert that uranium to bomb grade, Iran would retain the ability to do so as long as it retains an operational enrichment site.