- IP addresses are transitioning from technical identifiers to scarce digital capital with measurable economic value.
- Markets and enterprises increasingly treat IPv4 holdings like investment portfolios, while governance and IPv6 adoption shape future valuation.
Why IP addresses matter as digital capital
For decades, IP addresses were viewed solely as technical labels—necessary but invisible plumbing that enabled devices to communicate over the internet. However, this perception has fundamentally shifted. IP addresses now function as critical enablers of connectivity, scalability, and more importantly, as a strategic digital assets for enterprises. This transformation elevates them beyond mere infrastructure components into the realm of digital capital—a term increasingly used in academic and policy circles to describe intangible yet economically valuable digital resources.
The primary driver of this reclassification is scarcity. The IPv4 protocol, introduced in 1970s, provides approximately 4.3 billion unique addresses—a finite pool that was effectively exhausted for public allocation by the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) in 2011. Regional Internet Registries (RIRs), such as ARIN (North America), RIPE NCC (Europe), and APNIC (Asia-Pacific), followed suit, depleting their free pools between 2015 and 2019. With no new IPv4 addresses available from official sources, organizations must now acquire them through secondary markets.
This scarcity has catalyzed the emergence of robust, price-driven markets. According to data from the market, the average price per IPv4 address rose from under 10 in 2015 to over 40 by late 2025—a more than fourfold increase. These figures are corroborated by independent market analyses, including those published by PCH and Hilco Streambank, both active participants in IP asset transactions. Such sustained price appreciation mirrors patterns seen in traditional capital assets, not consumable technical resources.As noted in a 2024 industry report by APNIC, “Enterprises now actively manage IPv4 address blocks as balance sheet items, evaluating acquisition costs, depreciation risks, and resale potential.” This behavioral shift signals that IP addresses are no longer just operational tools—they are strategic assets subject to financial planning and risk assessment.
Also Read: What are IP addresses and why they are important?
Case study: IPv4 trading as emerging asset behaviour
The clearest evidence of IP addresses functioning as an asset class lies in the structure and dynamics of IPv4 transfer markets. Platforms like IPv4.Global, IPXO, and Addrex facilitate the buying, selling, and leasing of IPv4 blocks, complete with due diligence, escrow services, and reputation scoring—hallmarks of mature asset markets.
For example, in 2023, Microsoft acquired a /13 block (over 500,000 addresses) from the bankrupt estate of a U.S. telecom company through a court-supervised auction—a transaction valued at more than $ 20 million. Similarly, cloud providers such as Amazon Web Services (AWS) and Google Cloud have quietly accumulated large IPv4 inventories to support legacy client infrastructure during the slow transition to IPv6. These acquisitions are not one-off operational decisions; they reflect long-term strategic stockpiling akin to holding reserves of rare commodities.
Critically, IPv4 addresses are not perfectly fungible. Unlike barrels of oil or shares of stock, each IP block carries a unique operational history. Addresses previously associated with spam, malware, or botnet activity may be blacklisted by major email and security services (e.g., Spamhaus, Google Safe Browsing), reducing their utility and market value. This introduces a layer of reputational risk—a feature common in real estate or credit markets but unusual for digital infrastructure. As such, buyers increasingly demand “clean” IP blocks with verifiable usage histories, further reinforcing asset-like characteristics.Judicial precedents are also catching up. In the 2021 U.S. bankruptcy case on Nortel Networks, courts recognized IP addresses as part of the company’s saleable estate, affirming their economic value. Similarly, the European Commission’s 2023 Digital Markets Act indirectly acknowledges the strategic importance of network resources, including addressing space, in assessing market dominance.
Also Read: Why IPv4 prices keep rising even as IPv6 adoption gathers pace
Governance, IPv6 and asset evolution
The long-term trajectory of IP addresses as an asset class hinges on two interrelated factors: governance reform and IPv6 adoption.
IPv6, with its 128-bit address space (approximately 3.4 × 10³⁸ addresses), eliminates scarcity concerns in theory. Yet adoption remains incomplete. According to Google’s IPv6 statistics, global user adoption reached just 42% by January 2026. In enterprise environments—particularly in finance, healthcare, and government—legacy systems often lack IPv6 compatibility, forcing continued reliance on IPv4. This “dual-stack” reality ensures that IPv4 retains economic relevance well into the 2030s.
Moreover, IPv6 does not fully replicate IPv4’s functionality in all contexts. Many security tools, monitoring systems, and third-party APIs still default to IPv4. Transition mechanisms like NAT64 introduce latency and complexity, making pure IPv6 deployment impractical for many organizations. As a result, demand for IPv4 persists even as IPv6 expands.
This prolonged coexistence sustains IPv4’s value—but only if governance evolves. Currently, RIRs operate under a stewardship model rooted in the early internet’s academic ethos, prioritizing equitable access over market efficiency. While this approach preserved openness in the internet’s formative years, it now conflicts with economic realities. Some RIRs are adapting. RIPE NCC now allows members to lease IPv4 addresses under formal agreements, and LACNIC has piloted a “marketplace integration” initiative to streamline transfers. However, ARIN and APNIC maintain stricter controls. To recognize the existence of a global IPv4 market could enhance market confidence and unlock greater capital formation.
IP Address: From Numbers to Net Worth
IP addresses—once invisible utilities—are now scarce, tradable, and strategically managed digital assets. Market behavior, pricing trends, and corporate strategy all confirm this shift. Yet formal recognition lags due to outdated governance models and the unresolved tension between stewardship and market logic.
The path forward requires pragmatic reforms: standardizing transfer rules, clarifying legal status, and integrating IP holdings into broader digital asset frameworks..As the digital economy grows, so too must our understanding of its foundational elements. IP addresses are no longer just numbers; they are units of digital capital, deserving of serious financial, legal, and policy attention.
