Not really.  By definition, a VLAN is a separate broadcast domain and a
separate subnet.  Communication between VLANs requires a routing process. 
Trying to place two separate subnets in the same VLAN defeats the purpose of
having a VLAN in the first place, and it's going to screw up your routing. 
I'm not even sure you'd be able to do it. 

If you have an external router doing your interVLAN routing for you, then I
suppose you could try a secondary IP address on the subinterface for that
VLAN.  I don't even know if that's possible, and even if it is, I'm sure it
opens up an entire separate can of worms.

I suggest doing it right from the beginning:  keep each subnet in its own
VLAN.

John Neiberger, CCNA/CCDA

>  I want to have one Vlan (for example vlan 100) and have both 10.100.5/24
and 
>  10.100.6/24 on the same subnet so that I can use the same gateway.  Is
there 
>  a way to accomplish this?  Thanks.
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