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by tamrix 998 days ago
I can promise you no one is paying $35 per IPv4 address.
4 comments

i disagree. skuhn posted a link to some historical data https://auctions.ipv4.global/prior-sales

Based on data from the IPv4 brokerage ipv4.global, the cost of IPv4 addresses has seen a notable increase. In 2014, the price ranged from $6 to $24 per IP, depending on the size of the subnet. By 2021, this range had jumped to between $23 and $60 per IP. The fluctuation between the lowest and highest sales prices for each IPv4 address remained relatively stable until 2021, when we began to see more significant spikes.

The peak prices for IPv4 addresses in 2021 were observed in September and October. During these months, IP addresses allocated by RIPE NCC and ARIN fetched as much as $60 each. Specifically, a /24 block from RIPE NCC sold for $15,360, while ARIN's /22 and /23 blocks went for $61,440 and $30,720, respectively.

Fast forward to October 2022, and the highest sale of the year was recorded: IP addresses allocated by ARIN sold for $60.70 each, or $15,540 for a complete /24 block. Despite these peaks, the IPv4 market appears to have reached a more stable pricing structure, especially when compared to the more volatile price shifts seen in 2021.

https://auctions.ipv4.global/prior-sales

$30-35 is the low end per IPv4 address over the last year.

People who need them on short notice often pay more. The rent AWS collects on their IPv4s also pays that off in a year, I think.
How much does Amazon charge? I pay about 50 Euro cents a month to Hetzner for mine.

I've tried running web servers as pure IPv6 plays, which I would happily, happily prefer. It is just not possible. Even things I'm convinced will work, like cellphones, which are mostly IPv6 these days, won't connect.

AWS charges $0.005 per IP per hour. Multiplied by 8760 hours, you get about $44/year at 100% utilization.
Go on...what are people paying then? More or less?
If you are willing to wait, you pay nothing. However, let's keep in mind that this evaluation is based on the private transfer market place for IPv4s not based on actual RIR costs.

You must be an RIR member to hold IPs and there are membership dues that you must pay each year to maintain your allocation. Once you are a member of an RIR you just have to make a request and at least with ARIN that request and fulfillment is free.

ARIN’s free pool of IPv4 address space was depleted on 24 September 2015. As a result, we no longer can fulfill requests for IPv4 addresses unless you meet certain policy requirements that reserved blocks of IPv4 addresses for special cases. https://www.arin.net/resources/guide/ipv4/ ie. you have virtually no other option than to buy on the private market
ARIN is the first to deplete. I think other RIR still IPv4 left.
But the wait is long and everyone is rationing addresses so any free allocation is unlikely to be very large.