Claude Sonnet 5 vs GLM 4.7

Anthropic · US  |  Z.ai · China · Updated June 2026

Quick verdict

Pick Claude Sonnet 5 for agentic workflows that plan, use tools, and run autonomously or multi-step coding, debugging, and tool use. Pick GLM 4.7 for genuinely permissive open weights — an mit-licensed 358b mixture-of-experts with no commercial restrictions or strong agentic coding for the price — 73.8% on swe-bench verified undercut most closed frontier models at launch. Choose GLM 4.7 if you need self-hosting or data privacy; Claude Sonnet 5 if you want a managed API.

Claude Sonnet 5 (Anthropic, US) and GLM 4.7 (Z.ai, China) line up two different AI ecosystems against each other — a comparison that is as much about cost philosophy and openness as raw capability. Claude Sonnet 5 is anthropic's most agentic Sonnet, with near-Opus-4.8 performance at Sonnet prices; the default model on Free and Pro. GLM 4.7 is an MIT-licensed 358B open mixture-of-experts with strong 73.8% SWE-Bench Verified coding — but two generations behind GLM 5.2. They diverge most on price, context window and open vs. closed weights — each quantified below from the models' real specs.

Key differences at a glance

Side-by-side specs

SpecClaude Sonnet 5GLM 4.7
ProviderAnthropic (US) Z.ai (China)
ReleasedJune 30, 2026 December 22, 2025
Context window1M (~1,500 pages) 200K (~304 pages)
Price (in/out)$3/$15 per 1M tokens $0.6/$2.2 per 1M tokens
Open weight?No — API only Yes — self-hostable
Modalitiestext, image, code text, code
SWE-Bench VerifiedNot published 73.8%
MRCR v2 @ 1MNot published Not published

Who wins what

Agentic workflows that plan, use tools, and run autonomously

Claude Sonnet 5

Anthropic's most agentic Sonnet, with near-Opus-4.8 performance at Sonnet prices; the default model on Free and Pro — and it carries the larger 1M context.

Multi-step coding, debugging, and tool use

Claude Sonnet 5

Anthropic's most agentic Sonnet, with near-Opus-4.8 performance at Sonnet prices; the default model on Free and Pro — and it is the newer of the two.

Everyday professional and knowledge work

Claude Sonnet 5

Claude Sonnet 5 lists everyday professional and knowledge work among its strengths; GLM 4.7 does not.

Genuinely permissive open weights — an MIT-licensed 358B mixture-of-experts with no commercial restrictions

GLM 4.7

Open weights make this possible at all — Claude Sonnet 5 is API-only, so it cannot leave the vendor's servers.

Strong agentic coding for the price — 73.8% on SWE-Bench Verified undercut most closed frontier models at launch

GLM 4.7

At $0.6/$2.2 per 1M tokens it undercuts Claude Sonnet 5 ($3/$15 per 1M tokens), and that gap compounds at volume.

An unusually generous 128K maximum output, which suits bulk refactors and long generation

GLM 4.7

An MIT-licensed 358B open mixture-of-experts with strong 73.8% SWE-Bench Verified coding — but two generations behind GLM 5.2 — and it runs cheaper at $0.6/$2.2 per 1M tokens.

Lowest cost at scale

GLM 4.7

At $0.6/$2.2 per 1M tokens, it is the cheaper of the two — the gap dominates the bill on high-volume workloads.

Largest single-prompt input

Claude Sonnet 5

Its 1M window is about 4.9× larger than GLM 4.7's 200K, fitting roughly 1,500 pages in one prompt.

Which should you pick?

A cost-sensitive startup shipping high volume

GLM 4.7

At $0.6/$2.2 per 1M tokens it undercuts Claude Sonnet 5, and on millions of tokens that margin decides the monthly bill.

Someone analysing very long documents or codebases

Claude Sonnet 5

Larger 1M window fits more in one prompt.

A team with data-privacy or self-hosting needs

GLM 4.7

Open weights let you run it on your own hardware; Claude Sonnet 5 is API-only.

Anyone whose priority is agentic workflows that plan, use tools, and run autonomously

Claude Sonnet 5

It is specifically built for that.

Anyone whose priority is genuinely permissive open weights — an mit-licensed 358b mixture-of-experts with no commercial restrictions

GLM 4.7

That is its strongest area.

An enterprise with regional data-residency rules

Claude Sonnet 5 or GLM 4.7

Origin (US vs China) affects where data is processed and which compliance regime applies — check the provider's terms for your region.

Claude Sonnet 5: where it fits

Anthropic's most agentic Sonnet, with near-Opus-4.8 performance at Sonnet prices; the default model on Free and Pro. Released June 30, 2026 by Anthropic, it is built for agentic workflows that plan, use tools, and run autonomously, multi-step coding, debugging, and tool use, everyday professional and knowledge work, and long-document analysis and reasoning.

Its trade-offs are real: lower peak accuracy than Opus 4.8 on the hardest tasks, and an updated tokenizer that can use 1.0-1.35x more tokens for the same text. At $3 in / $15 out per million tokens, it sits in the mid price band.

GLM 4.7: where it fits

An MIT-licensed 358B open mixture-of-experts with strong 73.8% SWE-Bench Verified coding — but two generations behind GLM 5.2. Released December 22, 2025 by Z.ai, it is built for genuinely permissive open weights — an MIT-licensed 358B mixture-of-experts with no commercial restrictions, strong agentic coding for the price — 73.8% on SWE-Bench Verified undercut most closed frontier models at launch, an unusually generous 128K maximum output, which suits bulk refactors and long generation, and cheap long-running agent loops thanks to aggressive prompt caching.

Its trade-offs: two generations behind — GLM 5, 5.1 and 5.2 have all shipped since, and new builds should default to those, its Verified lead narrows sharply on harder evaluations like SWE-Bench Pro, and text-only with no vision, and self-hosting a 358B model is a serious hardware commitment. At $0.6 in / $2.2 out per million tokens, it sits in the budget price band.

The bottom line for this matchup

The defining split here is open vs. closed. GLM 4.7 gives you weights you control — self-host it, fine-tune it, keep data in-house, pay only for hardware. Claude Sonnet 5 gives you a managed, always-updated API with no infrastructure to run. Teams with GPUs, privacy requirements, or huge volume often favour the open model; teams that want zero ops and the latest capabilities favour the closed one. Capability is close enough that this operational question, not the benchmark, usually decides it.

Want both Claude Sonnet 5 and GLM 4.7 without two subscriptions? LumiChats gives you these plus 40+ models under one ₹69/day pass (about $1/day) — draft with one, cross-check with the other.

See pricing

Frequently asked questions

Is Claude Sonnet 5 or GLM 4.7 better for coding?

Public SWE-Bench figures are not available for Claude Sonnet 5, so the honest test is your own repository — run an identical real bug through both. By design, Claude Sonnet 5 leans toward agentic workflows that plan, use tools, and run autonomously while GLM 4.7 leans toward genuinely permissive open weights — an mit-licensed 358b mixture-of-experts with no commercial restrictions, and that positioning usually predicts which feels better on your codebase.

Which is cheaper, Claude Sonnet 5 or GLM 4.7?

GLM 4.7 is open-weight, so self-hosting means no per-token fee (you pay for hardware instead), while Claude Sonnet 5 is API-metered at $3/$15 per 1M tokens. For most teams without GPUs, the API model is cheaper to start; at very high volume, self-hosting can win.

Which has the bigger context window?

Claude Sonnet 5 — 1M vs 200K, about 4.9× larger. Useful only if the model actually reasons over the full window, which not all do.

Can I use both Claude Sonnet 5 and GLM 4.7 together?

Yes — a multi-model platform like LumiChats gives you Claude Sonnet 5, GLM 4.7 and 40+ others under one ₹69/day pass (about $1/day), so you can draft with one and cross-check with the other instead of buying two subscriptions.

Which is newer, Claude Sonnet 5 or GLM 4.7?

Claude Sonnet 5 — released June 30, 2026, about 6 months after GLM 4.7.

Related comparisons

Specifications and benchmarks reflect publicly reported figures as of June 2026 and may change as providers release updates. Always verify on your own workload.