Subnet Mask
255.255.0.0
CIDR
/16
Total Addresses
65,536
Usable Hosts
65,534
01 / KEY VALUES

255.255.0.0 at a glance

Subnet mask
255.255.0.0
CIDR notation
/16
Wildcard mask
0.0.255.255
Total addresses
65,536
Usable hosts (RFC)
65,534
Subnet bits
16
Open in Calculator → See /16 prefix page
02 / CLOUD HOSTS

Usable hosts by cloud provider

Provider Reserved Usable Hosts
Standard (RFC)265,534
AWS VPC565,531
Azure VNet565,531
GCP465,532
OCI365,533
03 / WHERE YOU SEE IT

When to use 255.255.0.0

The classic 192.168.0.0/16 home/SMB range, plus the default size for many cloud VPCs.

For the full deep dive (use cases, examples, AWS-specific sizing), see the /16 prefix page →

← 255.254.0.0 (/15)
All masks →
255.255.128.0 (/17) →
03 / SUBNET MATH

How to read the 255.255.0.0 mask

The /16 subnet uses 255.255.0.0 as its subnet mask — meaning the first 16 bits of every address identify the network, and the remaining 16 bits identify the host within that network. That gives you 65,536 total addresses (65,534 usable on standard RFC math, after subtracting the network and broadcast addresses).

The wildcard mask — the bitwise inverse of the subnet mask — is 0.0.255.255. 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 /16, that leaves 16 don't-care host bits.

To find the network address for any IP in a /16 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.

04 / IN PRACTICE

Where you encounter 255.255.0.0 in real networks

A /16 is the classic large-network allocation. 65,536 addresses, often used as a corporate site aggregate or as the parent CIDR of an AWS VPC, Azure VNet, or GCP custom subnet. The maximum VPC size in AWS is /16.

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 /16 on standard RFC math gives you 65,534 usable hosts, but on AWS or Azure that drops to 65,531. 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.

05 / FAQ

Common questions

What CIDR notation is 255.255.0.0?

The subnet mask 255.255.0.0 equals /16 in CIDR notation. This means 16 bits of the 32-bit address identify the network, and 16 bits identify the host.

How many hosts does the 255.255.0.0 subnet support?

A subnet with mask 255.255.0.0 (/16) supports 65,534 usable hosts on standard RFC math. On AWS or Azure (5 reserved IPs), 65,531 hosts. On GCP (4 reserved), 65,532.

What is the wildcard mask for 255.255.0.0?

The wildcard mask is the bitwise inverse of the subnet mask. For 255.255.0.0, the wildcard is 0.0.255.255. Cisco access control lists use wildcard masks instead of subnet masks.

06 / RELATED

Related prefixes & tools