GPT-5.4
GPT-5.4 is the safest overall answer here when you want the strongest default instead of the lowest list price.
- Best for
- Agentic workflows, desktop automation, and complex multi-step reasoning
- Price
- $2.50/1M
- Context
- 272k tokens
GPT-5.4 wins on coding (90 vs 85) and writing quality and price ($2.5 vs $12/1M input). For most workflows, GPT-5.4 is the stronger default — best for agentic automation and desktop control workflows.
Pick GPT-5.4 for coding and research. Pick GPT-5.2 when serious coding and complex product work.
Best for agentic automation and desktop control workflows.
Use GPT-5.4 if you want the strongest default. Switch only when cost, speed, or context length matters more than maximum reliability.
The shortest way to see the safest default, the lower-cost option, and the specialist pick before you read deeper.
GPT-5.4 is the safest overall answer here when you want the strongest default instead of the lowest list price.
Grok 4 is the lower-cost option to start with when you still need useful output at scale.
GPT-5.2 is the better pick when response speed matters more than maximum reasoning depth.
GPT-5.4 leads on coding with a score of 90 vs 85 for GPT-5.2.
GPT-5.4 has the larger context window: 272K vs 200K for GPT-5.2.
GPT-5.4 is cheaper at $2.5/1M input tokens vs $12/1M for GPT-5.2.
Choose GPT-5.4 for coding and research — agentic workflows.
Choose GPT-5.2 when serious coding and complex product work.
Both models serve different primary workflows — consider using each where it has a clear edge.
This comparison focuses on the models most likely to answer this search intent well, not every model in the directory.
Best for agentic automation and desktop control workflows.
Capable but outclassed — GPT-5.4 is now cheaper and better.
Use these cards as the practical decision layer: what each leading option is good at, and when it becomes the wrong default.
Best for agentic automation and desktop control workflows.
Agentic workflows, desktop automation, and complex multi-step reasoning
You need the highest coding benchmark scores — Claude Opus 4.6 and Sonnet 4.6 lead SWE-bench.
Capable but outclassed — GPT-5.4 is now cheaper and better.
Serious coding and complex product work
You're starting a new project — GPT-5.4 is cheaper and more capable.
UseRightAI recommendations are based on practical decision factors people actually feel in day-to-day use.
Benchmark scores from SWE-bench (coding), ARC-AGI-2 (reasoning), and MMLU (knowledge breadth) — cross-referenced against Chatbot Arena community votes to filter out cherry-picked provider claims.
Input and output costs verified directly against each provider's official API pricing page. Updated whenever a price change is detected. Value-per-dollar is weighted separately from raw benchmark rank.
Advertised context sizes are noted but scored against real-world usability — models that degrade significantly at large contexts are penalised even if the window is technically available.
Production signals matter more than lab scores. We weight Cursor and Windsurf defaults, HackerNews sentiment, developer surveys, and which models teams actually keep using after the honeymoon period.
One-off wins on cherry-picked benchmarks don't move our rankings. We favour models that stay dependable across repeated prompts, diverse task types, and long sessions without degrading.
Time-to-first-token and output throughput from Artificial Analysis speed benchmarks. Latency is categorised from Very fast to Deliberate — relevant when building interactive or high-throughput products.
Data sources
The fastest way to see where the recommendation shifts when your priority changes.
Best for agentic automation and desktop control workflows.
Capable but outclassed — GPT-5.4 is now cheaper and better.
Only frontier model that can control a desktop via API (click, type, navigate)
Strong at multi-step agentic tasks and autonomous workflows
Competitive coding performance with 74.9% SWE-bench score
Claude Opus 4.6 and Sonnet 4.6 outperform it on pure coding benchmarks
Smaller context window (272K) vs Gemini 3.1 Pro (2M) for research
Newsletter
Useful if you care about ranking shifts, pricing changes, or a better recommendation appearing in this decision path.
No spam. Useful updates only. Affiliate disclosures always clearly labeled.
GPT-5.4 wins on more categories — coding, research, reasoning. GPT-5.2 is the better pick when serious coding and complex product work. The right choice depends on your specific use case.
GPT-5.4 is cheaper at $2.5/1M input and $15/1M output. GPT-5.2 costs $12/1M input and $38/1M output.
GPT-5.4 has the larger context window at 272K tokens vs GPT-5.2's 200K. For large document analysis, GPT-5.4 is the stronger pick.
GPT-5.4 is better for coding with a score of 90 vs GPT-5.2's 85. For the highest coding quality available, Claude Sonnet 4.6 (79.6% SWE-bench) or Opus 4.6 (80.8%) remain benchmarks.
Both GPT-5.4 and GPT-5.2 have similar speed profiles — rated balanced.