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What Is a Subinterface? Complete Guide + Configuration Examples

J Homethagan Dec 10, 2025 2 min read 210 views

Subinterfaces let you split one physical network port into multiple logical interfaces. Each subinterface can carry its own VLAN tag (802.1Q), IP addressing, and access control rules — enabling inter‑VLAN routing and efficient hardware use.

 

sub-interface

Router-on-a-stick: one physical interface hosting multiple subinterfaces for VLAN routing.

What is a Subinterface?

A subinterface is a logical interface created on a physical interface of a router or firewall. It behaves like a separate network interface with its own IP address and configuration. Common naming follows vendor conventions, for example GigabitEthernet0/0.10 for VLAN 10 on Cisco devices.

How Subinterfaces Work

On trunk links, frames are tagged with a VLAN ID using 802.1Q. The router inspects the tag and passes traffic to the matching subinterface. This architecture is often called Router‑on‑a‑Stick.

Benefits and Use Cases

  • Inter‑VLAN routing using a single physical interface.
  • Cost savings — fewer physical interfaces and modules required.
  • Flexible segmentation with per‑VLAN policies, DHCP scopes, and ACLs.
  • Common in enterprise, campus, and multi‑tenant ISP networks.

Cisco Configuration Example (Router‑on‑a‑Stick)

Cisco IOS sample

! Bring up the physical interface
interface GigabitEthernet0/0
 no shutdown

! Subinterface for VLAN 10
interface GigabitEthernet0/0.10
 encapsulation dot1Q 10
 ip address 192.168.10.1 255.255.255.0

! Subinterface for VLAN 20
interface GigabitEthernet0/0.20
 encapsulation dot1Q 20
 ip address 192.168.20.1 255.255.255.0

! Subinterface for VLAN 30
interface GigabitEthernet0/0.30
 encapsulation dot1Q 30
 ip address 192.168.30.1 255.255.255.0

Best Practices

  1. Use descriptive naming and document VLAN IDs and IP schemes.
  2. Apply ACLs on subinterfaces to limit inter‑VLAN access where needed.
  3. Monitor trunk links for bandwidth and use QoS if carrying many VLANs.
  4. For high throughput, consider using multiple physical links or SVI (switch virtual interfaces) on L3 switches.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. What is the purpose of a subinterface?

  • To allow multiple VLANs or logical networks to share a single physical interface for routing or segmentation.

2. Can subinterfaces have different IP networks?

  • Yes — each subinterface can be assigned its own IP address and subnet.

3. Are subinterfaces vendor specific?

  • The concept is vendor agnostic, but syntax and capabilities vary. Cisco, Juniper, Fortinet, MikroTik, and others support similar mechanisms.
J Homethagan
J Homethagan

Technical writer specializing in networking and cloud computing.

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