What a coding agent actually costs per month, by model (2026) A developer's analysis of coding agent costs reveals a 63× price spread across models for the same workload, with output token pricing being the dominant factor. For a busy single-developer agent consuming ~90M input and ~25M output tokens per month, costs range from $19 (Qwen3.5-Flash) to $1,200 (GPT-5.6 Sol). The analysis emphasizes that output price, not input, drives the bill for token-hungry coding agents. "Which model should I run my coding agent on?" almost always turns into a price question once the first invoice lands. Coding agents are token-hungry — they read whole files, reason across a repo, and emit long diffs — so the model you pick shows up on your bill in a big way. Here's the part nobody tells you: for a coding workload, output price dominates . An agent that burns ~90M input and ~25M output tokens a month pays for those 25M output tokens at rates that swing from $0.28 to $30 per million. That single number decides most of your bill. Below is one fixed workload — ~90M input + ~25M output tokens/month a busy single-developer coding agent — priced against each model's current, official API rates. Nothing here is invented; every figure is pulled live from AI Model Watch https://aimodelwatch.dev , which tracks these prices daily from provider pricing pages. | Model | Input $/M | Output $/M | Est. monthly cost | |---|---|---|---| | Qwen3.5-Flash | $0.10 | $0.40 | $19 | | DeepSeek-V4-Flash | $0.14 | $0.28 | $20 | | Codestral v25.08 | $0.30 | $0.90 | $50 | | Gemini 3.1 Flash-Lite | $0.25 | $1.50 | $60 | | DeepSeek-V4-Pro | $0.435 | $0.87 | $61 | | Mistral Large 3 | $0.50 | $1.50 | $83 | | Kimi K2.7 Code | $0.95 | $4.00 | $186 | | Qwen3-Max | $1.20 | $6.00 | $258 | | Grok 4.5 | $2.00 | $6.00 | $330 | | Gemini 3.5 Flash | $1.50 | $9.00 | $360 | | GPT-5.4 | $2.50 | $15.00 | $600 | | GPT-5.6 Terra | $2.50 | $15.00 | $600 | | Claude Sonnet 5 | $3.00 | $15.00 | $645 | | Claude Opus 4.8 | $5.00 | $25.00 | $1,075 | | GPT-5.6 Sol | $5.00 | $30.00 | $1,200 | That's a 63× spread — $19/mo to $1,200/mo — for the same number of tokens. The choice of model, not the amount of work, is what moves the bill an order of magnitude. 1. Output tokens are where coding agents bleed. Compare DeepSeek-V4-Flash $0.28 out to Claude Sonnet 5 $15 out : a 54× output-price gap that a chat benchmark, which weights input heavily, would hide. Agents write a lot, so weight the output rate accordingly. 2. "Cheap" and "specialist" aren't the same axis. The two cheapest here are general-purpose small models Qwen3.5-Flash, DeepSeek-V4-Flash , not the code-branded ones. Codestral and Kimi K2 Code are tuned for coding, but you pay for the tuning. Whether that tuning earns its 4–9× premium depends on your task — benchmark it on your repo, not on a leaderboard. 3. The frontier tier is a different budget entirely. Opus 4.8 and GPT-5.6 Sol land above $1,000/mo on this workload. They may well close the loop in fewer iterations — a frontier model that one-shots a task can be cheaper in practice than a cheap model that needs five tries. But that's an efficiency argument you have to verify, not assume. The numbers above are current as of publication, but this corner of the market moves weekly: new coding models ship, prices get cut, and preview tiers graduate or get retired. If you're running an agent in production, a 2× output-price change is a real budget event. AI Model Watch tracks every LLM's price, context window and deprecation status daily from official sources, and sends a free email alert the moment a model you rely on changes price or gets an end-of-life date. If you'd rather not re-check a pricing page every week: aimodelwatch.dev . Full ranked coding-cost table and methodology: aimodelwatch.dev/guides/cheapest-llm-for-coding