Sent from my iPad On Jul 23, 2012, at 3:04 PM, Matthew Beckwell <matthewb@AITECH.NET> wrote:
On Jul 23, 2012, at 1:46 PM, Owen DeLong wrote:
Uh, no... Not annually. Those are the one time fees (actually $1250 for the IPv4 and another $1250 for the IPv6, plus $500 for the ASN), but all of those roll into $100 per year in maintenance fees to ARIN.
For anyone who's been "grandfathered" in (back in the good old days when all you had to do was justify)-- you pay $100 per year for maintenance, and that's it.
Sort of... If you got "grandfathered" and haven't signed an LRSA to protect your resource status with ARIN, you don't pay anything even today. If you got "grandfathered" and have signed an LRSA or RSA, you pay $100 per year. If you are not "grandfathered", you paid a one-time fee when your assignment was issued and then you pay $100/year if you are an end-user (an exchange point is, to the best of my knowledge, an end-user for fee purposes).
So if you got your 6 "Class B" networks back in 1993, and still have them today-- you pay ARIN a grand total of $100 per year.
If you got your /22 last year (like myself), then you pay $1,250 per year.
That's for an ISP -- You are an ISP. There are different fees for ISPs than for end-users. Trust me, I am _VERY_ familiar with ARIN policies and fees. Owen
~Matthew
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