Transit
The commercial internet service where one network pays another to carry its traffic to the rest of the internet, billed by bandwidth used (usually 95th-percentile).
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What is transit?
Transit is the paid service a smaller or less-connected network buys from a larger upstream provider to reach the rest of the internet. The customer pays per Mbps or Gbps, usually on a 95th-percentile model, and the transit provider announces the customer's routes out to the entire internet. Without transit, a network can only reach destinations it directly peers with.
Tier-1 transit
A "tier-1" network is one that reaches the entire internet purely through peering — it never buys transit from anyone. The list is small (roughly a dozen operators: Lumen, AT&T, NTT, Telxius, Arelion, Cogent, Zayo, and a few more) and fairly stable. Every other network, no matter how large, buys transit from at least one tier-1 or tier-2 upstream.
Transit vs. peering
- Transit — commercial, carries traffic to the entire internet, paid per volume
- Peering — settlement-free, carries only traffic destined for the peer and the peer's customers, no cost per volume
Most production networks use both: peer directly with the networks they exchange the most traffic with, buy transit to reach everything else. This mix is what lets BGP's "prefer shortest AS path" rule produce reasonable routes across the entire internet.
Transit in IP investigations
When investigating an IP, knowing whether an address is announced by a tier-1 carrier, a regional ISP with transit, or a niche hosting provider tells you a lot about what the IP is likely being used for. See the origin AS and its upstream transit on any IP with our WHOIS lookup tool.