Just how widely adopted is IPv6 in Australia?

By on 21 Nov 2024

Category: Tech matters

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Although the technology is well-established, IPv6 adoption varies significantly around the world, with some regions demonstrating higher adoption rates due to a combination of policy, industry leadership, and user demand.

Figure 1 — Global IPv6 adoption.
Figure 1 — Global IPv6 adoption. View the interactive visualization.

This variation extends to the projects that measure IPv6 adoption, each offering slightly different perspectives and biases based on their measurement methods and analysis.

If we look at Australia, for example, we can see that IPv6 adoption, according to Akamai, APNIC, Cloudflare, and Google, is slightly above or well below the global IPv6 adoption average of 40%.

Figure 2 — IPv6 Adoption in Australia.
Figure 2 — IPv6 adoption in Australia. View the interactive visualization.

Interestingly, some of these figures also fluctuate depending on the day of the week. For example, Cloudflare Radar data shows a 5% increase in IPv6 traffic every weekend in Australia due to the economy’s largest Internet Service Provider (ISP), Telstra (AS1221), having enabled IPv6 on most of its end users’ home routers.

Understanding the limitations and fluctuations in data, such as those tied to daily and weekly usage patterns, and the percentage of networks that have adopted IPv6 helps build a more reliable narrative about IPv6 progress in the economy and how best to improve adoption.

Below is a summary of a study I recently presented at AusNOG 2024 (see video below) that seeks to offer this additional context on IPv6 adoption in Australia, which can be easily replicated to understand the successes and limitations of IPv6 adoption in other economies.

IPv4 exhaustion has not hit Australia

It’s often said that Australia is a lucky economy. This is undoubtedly the case regarding the Internet number resources allocated for such a small population, particularly IPv4 addresses, which amount to around 47M as of September 2024, ranking it 11th globally.

Figure 3 — Top 20 global global IPv4 address allocation by economy.
Figure 3 — Top 20 global global IPv4 address allocation by economy. View the interactive visualization.

This ‘bounty’ came from being an early adopter of the Internet when the Regional Internet Registries more freely allocated IPv4 addresses.

Now, the only options for networks to grow are unsustainable and complex workarounds such as Network Address Translation (NAT), purchasing IPv4 addresses on the open market, or moving to IPv6.

Of Australia’s 1,691 active networks (Autonomous System Numbers (ASNs)), only one in four (417) have adopted IPv6.

Figure 4 — IPv6 adoption in Australia by ASN.
Figure 4 — IPv6 adoption in Australia by ASN. View the interactive visualization.

Some of these adopters are among Australia’s largest Internet Service Providers (ISPs). They include Telstra, Aussie Broadband, Superloop, Vodafone, and Vocus, all of which have enabled IPv6 for most of their customers. The remaining two big ISPs that have yet to adopt it are Optus and TPG.

Figure 5 — Australian IPv6 capable networks.
Figure 5 — Australian IPv6 capable networks. View the interactive visualization.

What’s next for IPv6 in Australia?

While IPv6 adoption in Australia and other economies is rising, there is plenty of opportunity to increase the rate.

Looking at the capability of all the active networks and their market share can help you identify these opportunities, especially recognizing the major networks that need to increase their investment in IPv6.

In Australia, the adoption pace will remain slow without broader support from larger network operators. This will limit the economy’s ability to transition fully to the next-generation Internet protocol and ensure long-term network scalability and sustainability.

Watch Aftab’s presentation at AusNOG 2025.

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The views expressed by the authors of this blog are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views of APNIC. Please note a Code of Conduct applies to this blog.

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