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IPv6 /114 Subnet Calculator

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A /114 contains 2¹⁴ addresses (16,384), suitable for small VLANs, management subnets, or lab scenarios. Standard production LANs should still use /64; this size is for deliberate constraints.

/0
/128

/114 = 2¹⁴ addresses (≈ 1.64 × 10⁴)

Results for 2001:db8:abcd:12::/114

Documentation (RFC 3849)Global scope
Network / prefixThe first address — identifies the subnet itself
First addressSubnet-router anycast; first address in the block
Last addressThe highest address in this block
Prefix maskEquivalent to /114
Total addresses≈ 1.64 × 10⁴ addresses
Address typeGlobally routable scope
More detailsNeighboring subnets, expanded address, reverse DNS, and hextet breakdown

Neighboring /114 subnets

Expanded address
Compressed address
Network (expanded)
Last address (expanded)
Prefix mask
Total addresses (exact)
Reverse DNS (PTR)
Host bits / network bits

Hextet breakdown

20010db8abcd00120000000000000001
NetworkSplit groupHost

Quick facts for IPv6 /114

IPv6 /114 reference guideBit split, overview, key facts, sizing tables, design notes, standards, and FAQ

Network / host bit split

Network bits (114)Split hextetHost bits (14)
Network bits
114
Host bits
14
Prefix mask
ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:ffff:c000
Total addresses
2¹⁴
Approx. count
1.64 × 10⁴
/64 subnets
Addresses formula
2^14
/64 relationship
smaller than a /64

Overview

A /114 contains 2¹⁴ addresses (16,384), suitable for small VLANs, management subnets, or lab scenarios. Standard production LANs should still use /64; this size is for deliberate constraints.

Common use cases

  • Small management VLANs
  • Test and staging environments
  • Subnetting practice for certification exams

Key facts

  • A /114 fixes 114 network bits and leaves 14 host bits — 2¹⁴ total addresses.
  • In network design terms, /114 is typically a constrained management or lab segment.
  • Written out, /114 holds exactly 16,384 addresses.
  • A /114 is 1/2⁵⁰ of a standard /64 LAN subnet.

Design guidance

A /114 can work for small management VLANs, out-of-band networks, or certification lab exercises where you deliberately cap the host count. For router interconnects, prefer /127 (RFC 6164) over /114. For ordinary LANs, stay with /64 regardless of how small the segment feels.

Practical example

In a lab, 2001:db8:abcd:0012::1/114 might number a small segment with 16,384 addresses. In production, you would normally expand this to a full /64 unless you have a documented exception.

Prefix sizing reference

Divide /114 into…

PrefixSubnetsAddresses each
/11528,192
/11644,096
/118161,024
/12225664

/114 fits inside…

SupernetAddresses/114s inside
/1132¹⁵2
/1122¹⁶4
/1102¹⁸16
/1062²²256

Frequently asked questions

Common questions about IPv6 /114 blocks, prefix sizes, and use cases.