What Are Class E Addresses?

Internet engineers reserved 268 million IPv4 addresses for “future addressing modes” in 1989. The addresses in 240.0.0.0/4 were documented as “Class E” and never allocated. They have remained reserved for that as-yet-undefined future ever since.  

  • There are about 268 million Class E IPv4 addresses 
  • They were reserved in 1989 
  • Large private cloud networks are numbered with Class E addresses 

Other internet engineers tried to define a use for them. Some wanted to designate them as unicast, so they could be used for regular internet – or at least local – network purposes. Others didn’t think they’d ever be usable across the internet. So they proposed that these addresses be designated as additional private addresses.  

But 16 years after those proposals were published, no formal redesignation has been agreed. But lots of work has made them usable on private networks. 

Most devices now allow data packets to be sent to and received from Class E addresses. And most modern network hardware supports use of Class E addresses. But many unmanaged network devices, like home Wi-Fi routers do not support Class E addresses. They will block traffic sent to or from Class E addresses. 

But Class E addresses are used successfully on large private cloud networks where all the hardware and software is controlled by a single entity. Research has shown these include Amazon AWS and Adobe.  

Some engineers are working to formally redesignate Class E addresses as unicast. But even if they succeed, the deployed base uses them so widely in a private context that they could not be allocated as globally unique IPv4 addresses by the RIRs. 

And the demand is so high, that the whole pool would be allocated as soon as the RIRs could process the requests.  

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