IPv4 subnetting reference

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Certain chunks of IPv4 address space are specially allocated by RFCs for special uses such as loopback, Private networks (RFC 1918), and Zeroconf (RFC 3927) usage, and are not available for allocation by Regional Internet Registries (RIRs).

The netmask is a bitmask that can be used to separate the bits of the network identifier from the bits of the host identifier. It is often written in the same notation used to denote IP addresses.

Not all sizes of prefix announcement may be routable on the public Internet: see routing, peering.

Class Leading bits Start End Default Subnet Mask in dotted decimal CIDR notation
A 0 0.0.0.0 127.255.255.255 255.0.0.0 /8
B 10 128.0.0.0 191.255.255.255 255.255.0.0 /16
C 110 192.0.0.0 223.255.255.255 255.255.255.0 /24
D 1110 224.0.0.0 239.255.255.255 not defined not defined
E 1111 240.0.0.0 255.255.255.254 not defined /4

While the 127.0.0.0/8 network is in the Class A area, it is designated for loopback and cannot be assigned to a network.

Class D multicasting

Class E reserved, but also see [1].


CIDR available bits Netmask Hosts / subnet Classful name Typical usage
/8 24 255.0.0.0 16777216 = 224 Class A (see this list) Largest block allocation made by IANA
/9 23 255.128.0.0 8388608 = 223
/10 22 255.192.0.0 4194304 = 222
/11 21 255.224.0.0 2097152 = 221
/12 20 255.240.0.0 1048576 = 220
/13 19 255.248.0.0 524288 = 219
/14 18 255.252.0.0 262144 = 218
/15 17 255.254.0.0 131072 = 217
/16 16 255.255.0.0 65536 = 216 Class B
/17 15 255.255.128.0 32768 = 215 ISP / large business
/18 14 255.255.192.0 16384 = 214 ISP / large business
/19 13 255.255.224.0 8192 = 213 ISP / large business
/20 12 255.255.240.0 4096 = 212 Small ISP / large business
/21 11 255.255.248.0 2048 = 211 Small ISP / large business
/22 10 255.255.252.0 1024 = 210
/23 9 255.255.254.0 512 = 29
/24 8 255.255.255.0 256 = 28 Class C

Large LAN

/25 7 255.255.255.128 128 = 27

Large LAN

/26 6 255.255.255.192 64 = 26

Small LAN

/27 5 255.255.255.224 32 = 25

Small LAN

/28 4 255.255.255.240 16 = 24

Small LAN

/29 3 255.255.255.248 8 = 23
/30 2 255.255.255.252 4 = 22 "Glue network" (point to point links)
/31 1 255.255.255.254 2 = 21 "Useless Network", proposed for point to point links (RFC 3021)
/32 0 255.255.255.255 1 = 20 Host route

Note that in common usage, the "host all zeros" address is reserved for referring to the whole network, while the "host all ones" address is reserved as a broadcast address; this reduces the number of hosts available by 2, explaining the reference to /31 as "Useless Network".

[edit] See also