Did you know that IPv4 addresses—once considered practically free—now trade for up to $60 per IP on the secondary market, a sixfold increase since 2020? With near exhaustion of available IPv4 space, businesses are rushing to secure blocks for hosting sites, email deliverability, or SaaS infrastructure. The explosion of cloud services, hosting, and colocation has only accelerated demand. In 2025, if you’re planning to buy IP addresses—especially for servers—security, transparency, and compliance aren’t optional; they’re essential.
That’s where this guide comes in. We’ll walk through the process of IP buy—from market overview, security best practices, due diligence on providers like Cyfuture Cloud, to the actual purchase and deployment process.
With RIRs like ARIN, RIPE, and APNIC depleted, the only way to get more IPv4 addresses is through the secondary market—meaning you buy them from existing holders. This scarcity has made IPv4 an asset, not a utility.
Many legacy systems, email services, firewalls, and whitelists still rely on IPv4. Migrating to IPv6 isn’t always feasible, especially for small-to-medium enterprises.
Cloud Hosting providers (and businesses using cloud or colocation services) need clean IP blocks to maintain email reputations, avoid spam filters, and ensure global reach.
Service providers, especially in India and other regulated markets, must own or lease IPs to meet data localization, network security, and ISP-binding policies.
Buying an IP is like owning digital real estate—due diligence is key. Here are the core considerations:
Check current registration in RIR databases (ARIN, APNIC, RIPE).
Ensure the seller owns the block outright and it’s fully transferable.
Avoid blocks with prior leasing, subletting, or split histories.
Always check IP block health using tools like Spamhaus or Cisco Talos.
A block that has been used previously for spam or botnets will be blacklisted, hurting email and hosting reputation.
Common minimum purchases are /24 blocks (256 IPs).
Larger blocks (/23, /22) give better per-IP pricing.
Small startups may buy fewer—just be aware of cost per IP.
Leasing (long-term) IP blocks can save initial outlay but still gives routing control and reputation benefits.
Ownership is ideal if future-proofing; leasing suits flexible, short-term needs.
When evaluating who you buy from, consider these secure options:
They handle paperwork, escrow, transfer, and ensure the block is clean.
Pros: Full compliance and traceability.
Cons: Broker fees can add 10–20%.
Quality colocation or cloud providers, including Cyfuture Cloud, sometimes bundle block leases or purchases with hosting services.
Pros: One-stop shop + managed integration.
Cons: Watch for pricing transparency.
Web communities, auction sites, and forums exist for IPv4 trading.
Pros: Potentially lower cost.
Cons: Risk of fraud or incomplete transfers—due diligence essential.
Scoping & Requirement Analysis
Define how many IPs you need & for what purpose.
Choose between lease or buy, block size, and RIR region based on server location (e.g., APNIC for India).
IP Block Search & Initial Check
Consult a broker or provider and get sample WHOIS info.
Run reputation checks via public blocklists.
Negotiation & Agreement
Get transparent pricing (per IP + broker fees + transfer).
Confirm transfer date, route setup, and support levels.
Escrow & IP Transfer
Use escrow services for payment release post-transfer.
The broker submits a transfer request to the relevant RIR.
Reverse DNS & ISP Integration
Once routed to your ASN or server farm, configure reverse DNS zones.
Useful for mail servers and lookup consistency.
Integration with Hosting/Colocation
Your provider (like Cyfuture Cloud) assigns the IPs to your servers.
Load balancers, SSLs, security layers are configured.
Ongoing Monitoring & Reputation Control
Connect to abuse monitoring services or RIR alerts.
Monitor usage and ensure no accidental spam or malicious traffic.
As businesses increasingly run services in cloud, hosting, or colocation setups, providers like Cyfuture Cloud offer native support:
Transparent IP buy or lease bundles aligned with colocation racks or server plans.
Full integration—DNS, reverse DNS, firewall, IP health monitoring.
Billing and compliance all in INR, streamlining budgeting and SUPP.
This makes buying IPs as simple as picking a hosting plan—everything from routing to support is bundled.
Scenario: Fintech startup wants 256 IPs for email servers, API nodes, and georouting.
Identified a clean /24 from APNIC region.
Broker quote: $15,000 + $3,000 broker fee = $18,000 (~₹15,00,000).
Lease rate: ₹40,000/month.
Cyfuture integration option: include the /24 + BGP + colocation for ₹85,000/month.
They chose a lease with hosting—predictable monthly cost and zero upfront risk.
Watch out for these pitfalls:
Blacklisted IP history: Always check. Block might be “cleaned,” but some reputation lingers.
Incomplete transfer: Ensure final registration in your name/ASN.
Geographic mismatch: Buying from ARIN but routing in India can raise cross-zone lag.
No reverse DNS setup: Essential for mail deliverability.
Neglected SLA: Make sure the broker or provider covers downtime, support, routing issues.
Securing IPv4 space in 2025 is a strategic necessity—but it doesn’t have to be complex. A structured IP purchase or lease process that prioritizes trusted brokers, provider-integrated offers (like Cyfuture Cloud), and due diligence can make the process smooth, secure, and scalable.
Whether you’re starting with a small API server, hosting clients’ email infrastructure, or running a hybrid cloud setup, the right IP acquisition strategy ensures your services are reliable, compliant, and future-ready.
By bundling IP buy options with your hosting or colocation plan, you set up for growth with fewer headaches and transparent costs—no surprise bills, broken integration, or reputation risk.
Let’s talk about the future, and make it happen!
By continuing to use and navigate this website, you are agreeing to the use of cookies.
Find out more