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by perlgeek 2071 days ago
I've talked to our resident backbone engineer about that about a year ago, and he said that larger blocks transfer for a lower value per IP, on average. I was surprised by that, but he showed me data that supported that.

Update: I just found http://www.circleid.com/posts/20180731_the_ipv4_market_2018_... which says

> As we head into the last half of 2018, small blocks are selling for just over $18/number, mid-blocks are in the $15-$18/number range, and large blocks have surpassed the $20/number threshold

so it seems there's a bit of an U shape, where mid-sized blocks have the lowest price per address.

1 comments

I think this makes sense. A lot of networks need a few addresses, so /24 - /22 is probably pretty active, and you have to justify the addresses, so someone who really only needs a /24 isn't able to buy a /21 and make it work; very few people need huge swaths, but those will be able to really use them and may value having them contiguous. In the middle, it doesn't make much difference having a /16 or two /17s or four /18s, so there's a lot more flexibility, and you take the lowest price per IP if there's a block you can use.