We are MDU ISP and at our managed wifi sites we see about 50-60% of our
traffic move to IPv6 when we enable it.

Zach Underwood (RHCE,RHCSA,RHCT,UACA)
My website <http://zachunderwood.me>
advance-networking.com

On Thu, Jun 19, 2025, 4:12 PM Forrest Christian (List Account) via NANOG <
[email protected]> wrote:

> I see numerous statistics from Google and similar sources that indicate the
> percentage of end users who are IPv6 native.   What I'm missing are
> statistics going the other way - what percentage of sites (or endpoints
> that customers regularly connect to) are IPv6-native, from a total traffic
> perspective?
>
> That is, if I switch to IPv6 on my eyeball network, how much of my existing
> traffic will I have to CGNAT in some way to reach the IPv4-only network?
>
> We have sufficient IPv4 address resources to stick with IPv4 for the
> foreseeable future.  However, at some point, the percentage of traffic
> using IPv6 becomes so high that the reasons not to move become less
> significant.   For example, the CGNAT box becomes significantly smaller, as
> most of the traffic should flow around it on IPv6.
>
> --
> - Forrest
> _______________________________________________
> NANOG mailing list
>
> https://lists.nanog.org/archives/list/[email protected]/message/ZWNAGD3GM6VKKNBE3QE5HHRJ26C4UXJF/
>
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