Price varies significantly by prefix length, and somewhat by region. Regional variance may not be as much as it used to be.
Lee On 7/14/15, 6:15 PM, "NANOG on behalf of Pavel Odintsov" <nanog-boun...@nanog.org on behalf of pavel.odint...@gmail.com> wrote: >Hello, folks! > >I have finished multiple (and 5th in RIPE) inter RIR subnet moves in RIPE >region. We have moved multiple /21-/20 networks and awerage cost was about >$10 per ip. > >On Tuesday, July 14, 2015, Martin Hannigan <hanni...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> On Tue, Jul 14, 2015 at 10:22 AM, Matt Kelly <mjke...@gmail.com >> <javascript:;>> wrote: >> >> > This list is actual sale prices, >> > http://www.ipv4auctions.com/previous_auctions/ >> > >> > >> > -- >> > Matt >> > >> > >> > On July 14, 2015 at 10:14:05 AM, Justin Wilson - MTIN (li...@mtin.net >> <javascript:;>) >> > wrote: >> > >> > Thes folks (and I am not advertising or affiliated with them) publish >>a >> > list of most recent transfer completed: >> > >> > http://ipv4marketgroup.com/broker-services/buy/ >> > >> > >> http://ipv4marketgroup.com/broker-services/buy/ vs. >> http://www.ipv4auctions.com/previous_auctions/ >> >> >> If you compare the pricing that both have made available you will find >>one >> is posting average prices exponentially higher than the other. When you >> trend the granular auction site data the auction numbers demonstrate a >> trend would expect, that smaller prefixes are more expensive since it >> takes a similar amount of effort to process a /24 as it does a /20. >>Dollar >> differences between a /24 unit and a /17 unit move the needle >> significantly. >> >> Based on both of both sets of public data its easy to conclude that >> auctions will work for at least small buyers of space if they're >> sophisticated enough to address the RIR issues. If you do decide to take >> the simple broker approach (not all are simple and not all approaches >>are >> suitable to simple brokers), use an RFP. And Yelp. :-) >> >> Best, >> >> -M< >> > > >-- >Sincerely yours, Pavel Odintsov >