On 15 Sep 2021, at 6:20 PM, Mark McDonald 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Hi John,

We must be looking at different fee charts.  Can you send me the one you’re 
referring to?  We hold a /19 and fall under the “Small” service category, 
paying roughly $0.12/IP/Year.  Right off the bat, we’re in the same service 
category as someone holding a /18, so we’re paying twice as much per IPv4 
Resource as them - but wait, it gets much, much better.

Mark -

The new fee schedule is here - 
https://www.arin.net/resources/fees/fee_schedule/   It is the same as the prior 
fee schedule, but starting in January will also apply to end-user organizations 
(who presently pay a fixed $150/year amount per block regardless of size)

Note that there are two possible extremes of  fee schedules for ARIN cost 
recovery - we could divide the costs by the number of address blocks in the 
registry or we could divide them the number of addresses represented in the 
registry.  Neither of these produce a particularly sensible outcome.    In 
2014, ARIN had a community panel look at these two extremes (and several other 
options) and that resulted in a fee schedule that’s not strictly linear to 
total address space held but rather increases in geometric proportion to the 
amount of address space held.

This means that a fourfold increase in IPv4 address space held results in 
ARIN’s fees doubling.   Note that this still provides for a relatively modest 
starting point of $250/year and yet goes up over one hundred thousand dollars 
annually for organizations with the largest address holdings.

(For the arguments in favor or opposed to straight linear fees and the other 
approaches that were considered, you can review the original Fee Structure 
Review Panel Final Report here - 
https://lists.arin.net/pipermail/arin-ppml/2014-September/029075.html)

I will note that the particular change being done in January takes those who 
currently pay a flat rate (regardless of specific address block sizes held) and 
makes it more proportionate – i.e. those (such as yourself) with larger total 
address holdings will pay more than before because you have more IP address 
than those in the smaller categories.   It’s not linear, but it brings us 
closer to the goal you espouse of having the fees be more proportionate to the 
total amount of address space held.

Thanks!
/John

John Curran
President and CEO
American Registry for Internet Numbers


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