Multi-VPC aggregation. Aggregates 4 /16 VPCs or 16 /18 subnets. Common in multi-cloud planning.
Aggregates 4 /16 VPCs or 16 /18 subnets. Common in multi-cloud planning.
The /14 subnet uses 255.252.0.0 as its subnet mask — meaning the first 14 bits of every address identify the network, and the remaining 18 bits identify the host within that network. That gives you 262,144 total addresses (262,142 usable on standard RFC math, after subtracting the network and broadcast addresses).
The wildcard mask — the bitwise inverse of the subnet mask — is 0.3.255.255. Wildcards are what Cisco access-control lists and OSPF area definitions use instead of subnet masks; the "1" bits mark "don't care" positions. For a /14, that leaves 18 don't-care host bits.
To find the network address for any IP in a /14 block, perform a bitwise AND between the IP and the subnet mask. To find the broadcast, OR the network address with the wildcard. Modern tools — like our subnet calculator — do this in microseconds, but the underlying mechanics are straightforward binary arithmetic.
A /14 contains 262,144 addresses. Used by very large enterprises as a corporate aggregate that gets split into many /16 sites. Often the size of a regional MPLS routing domain.
Cloud-provider quirks matter at every prefix size: AWS and Azure reserve 5 IPs per subnet, GCP reserves 4, and OCI reserves 3. So a /14 on standard RFC math gives you 262,142 usable hosts, but on AWS or Azure that drops to 262,139. The capacity-planning gap bites hardest at small prefixes (a /28 has 14 usable on paper, only 11 on AWS) but exists at every size. Our cloud-aware calculator applies the right math automatically.
A /14 subnet has 262,142 usable hosts on standard RFC math. On AWS or Azure (which reserve 5 IPs per subnet), you get 262,139 usable. On GCP (4 reserved), 262,140. On OCI (3 reserved), 262,141.
The /14 prefix corresponds to subnet mask 255.252.0.0. The matching wildcard mask (used in Cisco ACLs) is 0.3.255.255.
Apply a bitwise AND between the IP and the subnet mask to get the network address. OR the network address with the wildcard mask to get the broadcast. For example, 10.0.0.0/14 has 262,144 total addresses, with the first being the network address and the last being the broadcast.