Quick and nooby questions concerning subnets and DHCP on a simple home network - eviltoast

My consumer-grade router currently uses its defaults for DHCP assignment (192.168.1.0/24)

However, I’d like a “tidier” network. I’m thinking about using 10.0.0.0/21. I’d like to assign IPs for each known user’s device into a respective subnet.

This is entirely unnecessary; I don’t think I will net any tangible benefits. However, doing so would allow me to achieve a few things:

  • I learn about networking. I’m currently a total noob.
  • I am able to build a marginally more organized network (subjective)
    • example: client configuration in AdGuard Home is slightly more sensical to my human brain
IP range Usage
10.0.0.x “Common” devices; router (.1), home server (.2), Roku (.3), printer (.4)
10.0.1.x User A’s devices, manually assigned via MAC address in the router console
10.0.2.x User B’s devices, manually assigned via MAC address in the router console
10.0.3.x User C’s devices, manually assigned via MAC address in the router console
10.0.4.x Automatic DHCP assignment starts here; I would manually assign new and recognized devices (i.e. not guests) an IP in their proper subnet when I get around to it.

Questions

  • Does this make sense?
  • Are there any consequences I am not anticipating?
  • Are there any performance considerations?

Potentially very stupid questions

  • I’ll never actually use all 2,048 addresses under the /21 mask – is there any kind of performance impact by making so many unused host addresses available?
  • I’ll never have 254 devices on this network, let alone 254 on a single subnet. Should I be… “spreading out” the assigned host addresses? Like instead of .1, .2, .3, assign them .8, .16, .32, etc.?

Network information:

  • Verizon FiOS 300Mbps
  • CR1000B router/switch/access point all-in-one
  • Wyse 5070 running a few Docker containers, including a DNS blocker
  • roughly 12 connected devices, no IoT
    • four laptops
    • three smartphones
    • some secondary devices (smart watches)
    • one Roku, used between eight and twelve hours per week
    • one printer, almost always off

I will not be replacing the CR1000B anytime soon. Proper VLANs seem to be out of the question. This router does offer -Guest and -IoT; I think -Guest is VLAN’d with a maximum of ten connected devices (weird arbitrary limit) and the -IoT one is 2.4 GHz only, but not VLAN’d.


I’m a networking noob, so please correct me politely.