9 best Grok 4.5 alternatives in 2026
Alicia Kirana Utomo
Katelin Teen
Last edited July 9, 2026

Why people go looking for a Grok 4.5 alternative
Grok 4.5 earned its spot on the leaderboard. It's the single best agentic tool-use score of any model tested, it's fast (85.6 output tokens/sec against a ~73 average), and at $2.00/1M input and $6.00/1M output tokens, it undercuts most frontier peers while landing within a few points of them on raw intelligence. Cursor's CEO called it an "Opus-class model that's fast and low cost", and that's a fair read, not marketing puffery.
But three things send people looking elsewhere. First, it's #4, not #1: Claude Fable 5, Claude Opus 4.8, and GPT-5.5 all score higher on Artificial Analysis's Intelligence Index if raw reasoning is what you're optimizing for. Second, trust is a live, unresolved concern, and it was the single loudest theme in the Hacker News launch thread, ahead of any capability discussion, over the allegation that xAI nudges Grok's answers on political questions. Third, Grok 4.5 shipped with no batch discount, unlike the model it replaced, and its consumer pricing (SuperGrok's ~$30/month) still isn't confirmed on a page xAI's own site actually renders.
None of that makes Grok 4.5 a bad model. It makes it one option among several, and the right one depends heavily on whether your job is agentic tool-calling, raw reasoning, budget, or something else entirely.

The 9 alternatives at a glance
| Model | Best for | Input $/1M | Output $/1M | Context | Open weights | Free tier |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Claude Fable 5 | Raw intelligence, long-horizon coding | $10.00 | $50.00 | 1M tokens | No | No (subscription-included window) |
| GPT-5.6 Sol | Agentic coding, frontier reasoning | $5.00 | $30.00 | Undisclosed | No | No, gated preview |
| Gemini 3.1 Pro | Long context, Google Workspace | $2.00 | $12.00 | 1M tokens | No | Yes, limited |
| DeepSeek-V4 | Cheapest near-frontier option | $0.44 | $0.87 | 1M tokens | Yes | Yes, unmetered chat |
| Mistral Vibe | EU data residency, speed | $1.50 | $7.50 | 256K tokens | Partial | Yes |
| Perplexity | Cited, web-grounded answers | N/A (subscription) | N/A | N/A | No | Yes, limited |
| Qwen3.7-Max | Cheapest API, self-hosting | $1.25 | $3.75 | 1M tokens | Yes (Qwen3 line) | Yes |
| Microsoft Copilot | Office/365 workflows | N/A (subscription) | N/A | N/A | No | Yes, limited |
| Meta AI | Free, everywhere | Free | Free | Undisclosed | Partial (Llama) | Yes, unlimited |
| Grok 4.5 (for reference) | Cheap agentic tool use | $2.00 | $6.00 | 500K tokens | No | Yes, limited |
How I picked these
I started from what each model actually ships, not its marketing page: published API pricing, independent benchmark scores where they exist, and what real users say on Reddit, Hacker News, X, and LinkedIn once the initial hype cycle settles. A few of these (Gemini 3.1 Pro, Perplexity, Microsoft Copilot, Meta AI) aren't raw frontier models in the same technical sense as Grok, they're products built on top of one, but they're exactly what a reader typing "Grok 4.5 alternative" into a search bar is actually comparing against, so leaving them out would be dishonest curation.
1. Claude Fable 5 - best for raw intelligence
Claude Fable 5 is Anthropic's fifth-generation flagship, launched June 9, 2026, and it's the model that sits at the top of the Intelligence Index Grok 4.5 is measured against. Anthropic positions it as "designed to handle days-long, complex, and asynchronous tasks previous models couldn't sustain", and Stripe reportedly pointed it at a 50-million-line Ruby codebase and ran a migration across the whole thing in a day.
Pricing: $10 per 1M input tokens, $50 per 1M output, exactly 2x Claude Opus 4.8's rate, with a 90% prompt-caching discount on repeated context.
Where it wins over Grok 4.5: it's the single most intelligent model on the board (60 vs Grok's 54), it has a genuinely enormous 1M-token context window, and Simon Willison's hands-on verdict was blunt: "this is something of a beast. It's slow, expensive and has been quite happily churning through everything I've thrown at it so far."
Where it falls short: it's 5x Grok's input price and 8x its output price, and it comes with its own trust controversy, a second, undisclosed safeguard tier that quietly degrades responses on "frontier LLM research" prompts without telling the user.
"An AI model that gets less intelligent automatically without notifying me is categorically misaligned AI."
That's worth knowing before assuming "smarter" also means "more transparent."
Our take: the pick if intelligence and long-horizon autonomy matter more than price, and you can stomach a real trust asterisk of its own. Full breakdown in our Claude Fable 5 explainer and Claude Fable 5 for business.
2. GPT-5.6 - best for agentic coding, once it's out
OpenAI's GPT-5.6 preview, announced June 26, 2026, isn't one model but three tiers: Sol (flagship), Terra (balanced, roughly half Sol's price), and Luna (fastest, cheapest). Sol Ultra topped OpenAI's own Terminal-Bench 2.1 chart at 91.9%, and the family's headline capability is cybersecurity, which is also the reason for the rollout's biggest catch.
Pricing: Sol at $5.00/$30.00 per 1M tokens, Terra at $2.50/$15.00, Luna at $1.00/$6.00.
Where it wins over Grok 4.5: on paper, the strongest agentic coding benchmark in the field, and Terra at $2.50/1M input is squarely competitive with Grok's own pricing while claiming meaningfully more capability.
Where it falls short: you genuinely can't use it yet. As of this writing it's reachable only via the API and Codex for a small set of vetted, government-approved partners, not in ChatGPT, no public waitlist.
"OpenAI released GPT-5.6 Sol, their strongest model yet. And no, you can't use it yet."
The gated rollout is drawing its own "regulatory capture" backlash on Hacker News.
Our take: the one to bookmark, not switch to today. Track it alongside our GPT-5.6 overview, GPT-5.6 pricing breakdown, and GPT-5.6 review for when it actually opens up.
3. Gemini 3.1 Pro - best Google-ecosystem all-rounder
Gemini 3.1 Pro is Google's direct answer to ChatGPT and Claude: a 1M-token context window, native multimodal reasoning, and deep grounding in Google Search. It's the model Perplexity itself offers in its own model picker, which tells you where it sits competitively.
Pricing: $2.00 per 1M input tokens (up to 200K), $12.00 per 1M output, roughly matching Grok 4.5 on input while running double on output.
Where it wins over Grok 4.5: genuinely strong math and technical precision, per one Reddit switcher, "Gemini is way better with math expressions. GPT makes dumb mistakes with operators and coefficients all the time," and it's tightly wired into Search, Gmail, Docs, and Sheets in a way no standalone chatbot can match. Another switcher: "I genuinely cannot believe I wasted so much time and money on ChatGPT when Gemini is so much better."
Where it falls short: paying subscribers have reported real feature-parity bugs, one wrote that "as a paying customer, I have less feature access than someone using the service for free," and the community consensus on the paid tier's value has at times been unflattering: "Buying a Google Gemini subscription feels like paying for tap water at a restaurant."
Our take: the safest default if you already live in Google Workspace and want a model that's actually shipped, not previewed.

4. DeepSeek-V4 - best free and cheap open-weight pick
DeepSeek is the Chinese lab that put open-weight frontier models on the map, and its current flagship, DeepSeek-V4, is the sharpest budget answer to Grok 4.5 on this list. The consumer chat is completely free with no metered cap, and the weights are public on GitHub for anyone who wants to self-host.
Pricing: deepseek-v4-pro at $0.435 per 1M input tokens and $0.87 per 1M output, roughly a fifth of Grok 4.5's rate; deepseek-v4-flash is even cheaper at $0.14/$0.28.
Where it wins over Grok 4.5: the price, by a wide margin, plus a matching 1M-token context window and no vendor lock-in since the weights are open. If you outgrow the hosted API, you can run it yourself.
Where it falls short: DeepSeek is hosted in China under Chinese data law, a recurring concern in community threads, and its real-time web search and current-events freshness noticeably lags Gemini's Google-backed research. It's also the stronger pick for math and coding than for anything that needs today's news.
Our take: if your workload is high-volume and cost-sensitive rather than research-freshness-sensitive, this beats Grok 4.5 on price alone.
5. Mistral Vibe - best for EU data residency
Mistral AI is the European frontier lab, pitching itself as "Frontier AI. In your hands" with a hard focus on data sovereignty. Its consumer/agent product, previously called Le Chat, is now branded Vibe, and the flagship model behind it is Mistral Medium 3.5.
Pricing: Mistral Medium 3.5 at $1.50/$7.50 per 1M tokens; the cheaper Mistral Small 4 runs $0.10/$0.30. Vibe subscriptions start free, with Pro at $14.99/month.
Where it wins over Grok 4.5: genuine EU hosting and self-hosted deployment options for organizations that legally can't send data to a US or Chinese server, plus consistent praise for speed: one Reddit user said Le Chat/Vibe "is faster, produces more relevant content, produces better images."
Where it falls short: Mistral's own users are candid about the capability gap. Reddit calls the large models "way, way behind Claude and ChatGPT for advanced stuff" and "currently it's just cheap." G2 reviewers, even the positive ones, note it's "less refined than Claude."
Our take: the right call if EU data residency is a compliance requirement, not a preference. Otherwise the intelligence gap versus Grok 4.5 is real.
6. Perplexity - best if you actually want a search engine
Perplexity isn't a model, it's an AI answer engine that searches the live web and returns answers with inline, clickable citations, orchestrating several frontier models (including Gemini 3.1 Pro and Claude Sonnet 4.6) behind one interface. If what actually frustrates you about Grok is confidently-wrong answers with no way to check them, this solves a different problem than a smarter base model would.
Pricing: Free tier with limited Pro searches; Pro at $20/month ($17/month annual); Max at $200/month ($167/month annual); Enterprise from $40/seat/month.
Where it wins over Grok 4.5: verifiable sources on every claim, which is the single feature Reddit cites most for sticking with Perplexity: "Gemini ignores instructions, drifts off into weird tangents, and hallucinates with way more confidence" is how one user framed the gap, in Perplexity's favor.
Where it falls short: the loudest current complaint is tightened Pro limits, opaque model routing, and a fallback to a weaker model after a handful of "advanced" queries a day. And some 2026 users report the reverse of the citation argument: Gemini now gives "much better answers, better sourced, with excellent accuracy," while Perplexity was "confidently wrong."
Our take: pick this when the job is research with receipts, not open-ended reasoning or coding.
7. Qwen - best for self-hosting and rock-bottom pricing
Qwen is Alibaba Cloud's model family, and it's the largest catalogue on this list by a wide margin, 145+ model IDs spanning text, vision, audio, code, and video under one API key. Its flagship, Qwen3.7-Max, launched May-June 2026 as an agent-optimized reasoning model.
Pricing: Qwen3.7-Max at a promo-discounted $1.25/$3.75 per 1M tokens (undiscounted $2.50/$7.50); the open-weight Qwen3 line runs from $0.05/1M all the way down, and can be self-hosted for free on commodity hardware, one recurring Reddit theme is a quantized 30B model running locally on an M4 MacBook at ~45 tokens/sec.
Where it wins over Grok 4.5: the sheer breadth of price points, and a structural cost advantage developers on X and LinkedIn attribute to its mixture-of-experts architecture firing only 4-10% of parameters per token, "structurally 9x cheaper than Claude," in one framing, not a promotional loss-leader.
Where it falls short: Alibaba cut its free API tier hard in April 2026, from 1,000 requests/day down to 100, then to zero, and the backlash was immediate; Reddit users migrated to Claude, OpenRouter, or invested in self-hosting hardware in response. Token plans have also drawn complaints about burning through credits fast, one head-to-head test found Qwen's $30 plan consumed 23% of quota on a task that used under 1% of a comparable Claude plan.
Our take: the pick if you're technical enough to self-host, or just want the cheapest ticket into near-frontier output.

8. Microsoft Copilot - best if you live in Microsoft 365
Microsoft Copilot is less a Grok competitor and more a workflow decision: it's the assistant embedded directly in Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Teams, and Outlook, with enterprise security policies inherited automatically. Notably, Grok 4.5 itself is now the default model behind the Word, PowerPoint, and Excel Copilot-style add-ins, so the "alternative" framing here is really about the wrapper, not the underlying intelligence.
Pricing: free consumer tier; Microsoft 365 Personal at $99.99/year; Business Copilot at $18-21/user/month; Enterprise at $30/user/month.
Where it wins over Grok 4.5: context. Copilot can read your actual emails, documents, and meeting transcripts because it's embedded where the work already happens, something no standalone chatbot offers out of the box. A Product Manager summed up the split on Reddit: "I use ChatGPT for creative or research-heavy tasks because it just thinks better, but prefer Copilot for drafting presentations or summarizing Teams calls because it already has the context."
Where it falls short: only 35.8% of eligible users actually use Copilot despite deployment, and it struggles with datasets over 150 rows and degrades after 20-30 exchanges in a session. Outside the Microsoft ecosystem, it's simply not competitive on open-ended reasoning.
Our take: worth it only if the underlying M365 spend already exists; a poor standalone pick otherwise.
9. Meta AI - best free pick if cutting-edge isn't the priority
Meta AI runs on Llama 4 and is embedded directly into Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, Threads, and Ray-Ban glasses, free, with no subscription tier at all. It's the most-installed AI assistant on this list simply by virtue of being baked into apps billions of people already open daily.
Pricing: Free, full stop, across every surface.
Where it wins over Grok 4.5: zero cost, zero setup, and it's already where a huge share of the internet spends its time. Specialized offshoots like Llama-4:scout for vision tasks draw genuine praise for narrow use cases.
Where it falls short: on general model quality, the community read is blunt.
"Their last model was updated in April, and it's an absolute joke. It's worse in every aspect when compared to ChatGPT, Gemini, and even Grok."
It's also the most invasive of anything on this list: an exposed system prompt revealed instructions to "never share that a user's information is being accessed" while personalizing answers from saved facts, location, and history. And plenty of users actively resent its forced presence: "Not everything needs to be AI, just give me my search bar back."
Our take: fine for quick, casual questions inside an app you're already using; not a serious pick for anything that needs to be right.
Does the underlying model even matter for support?
Here's the pattern that repeats across every single one of these nine alternatives, and it's the same one we found looking at Grok 4.5 itself: every lab ships a capable model, and not one of them ships a hard stop on confidently wrong answers. Anthropic buries a second, silent safeguard tier in Fable 5. OpenAI gates GPT-5.6 behind government vetting. DeepSeek and Qwen are cheap but their freshness and hallucination rates aren't independently audited the way the big labs' are. Meta AI will cheerfully answer a support question wrong with the same confidence it answers one right.
We've spent the last three-plus years putting AI agents on live support queues at eesel, and the failure mode is always the same, regardless of which model sits underneath: a bot with no hard fallback on a failed knowledge-base lookup will fabricate an answer rather than say it doesn't know. That's not a Grok problem, or a Claude problem, or a Qwen problem. It's what every capable model does by default the moment nothing stops it from guessing.
Try eesel
Whichever model wins this round, Grok 4.5, Claude Fable 5, GPT-5.6 once it opens up, or something cheaper entirely, the hard part of AI support was never picking the smartest LLM underneath it. eesel sits on top of your existing helpdesk, whether that's Zendesk, Freshdesk, Gorgias, HubSpot, or Front, learns from your real ticket history on day one, and simulates against thousands of your past tickets before it ever answers a live customer. Gridwise saw eesel resolve 73% of tier-1 requests in the first month. Pricing is usage-based at $0.40 per resolved ticket, no seat fees, so switching the model underneath never means re-paying for one you didn't use. You can try eesel free, with $50 of usage and no credit card.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Article by
Alicia Kirana Utomo
Kira is a writer at eesel AI with a Computer Science background and over a year of hands-on experience evaluating AI-powered customer service tools. She focuses on breaking down how helpdesk platforms and AI agents actually work so that support teams can make better buying decisions.







