GPT-5.2 vs North Mini Code

OpenAI · US  |  Cohere · Global · Updated June 2026

Quick verdict

Pick GPT-5.2 for strong all-round reasoning or reliable structured output. Pick North Mini Code for agentic software engineering, code generation, and terminal tasks or efficient sparse moe — 3b active of 30b, runs on a single h100. Choose North Mini Code if you need self-hosting or data privacy; GPT-5.2 if you want a managed API.

GPT-5.2 (OpenAI) and North Mini Code (Cohere) are two of the models people most often weigh against each other in 2026. GPT-5.2 is a capable GPT-5-generation all-rounder, now succeeded by GPT-5.5. North Mini Code is cohere's first agentic coding model: an open-weight 30B/3B-active MoE built for real software-engineering and terminal tasks that runs on a single H100. 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

SpecGPT-5.2North Mini Code
ProviderOpenAI (US) Cohere (Global)
ReleasedDecember 11, 2025 June 9, 2026
Context window400K (~600 pages) 256K (~384 pages)
Price (in/out)$1.75/$14 per 1M tokens Open weight (self-host / free)
Open weight?No — API only Yes — self-hostable
Modalitiestext, image, code text, code
SWE-Bench VerifiedNot published 67.6%
MRCR v2 @ 1MNot published Not published

Who wins what

Strong all-round reasoning

GPT-5.2

A core design strength of GPT-5.2.

Reliable structured output

GPT-5.2

A core design strength of GPT-5.2.

Broad ecosystem and tooling

GPT-5.2

A core design strength of GPT-5.2.

Agentic software engineering, code generation, and terminal tasks

North Mini Code

A core design strength of North Mini Code.

Efficient sparse MoE — 3B active of 30B, runs on a single H100

North Mini Code

A core design strength of North Mini Code.

High throughput (up to 2.8x Devstral Small 2) at low latency

North Mini Code

A core design strength of North Mini Code.

Lowest cost at scale

North Mini Code

At Open weight (self-host / free), it is the cheaper of the two — the gap dominates the bill on high-volume workloads.

Largest single-prompt input

GPT-5.2

Its 400K window is about 1.6× larger, fitting roughly 600 pages in one prompt.

Which should you pick?

A cost-sensitive startup shipping high volume

North Mini Code

At Open weight (self-host / free) it undercuts GPT-5.2, and on millions of tokens that margin decides the monthly bill.

Someone analysing very long documents or codebases

GPT-5.2

Larger 400K window fits more in one prompt.

A team with data-privacy or self-hosting needs

North Mini Code

Open weights let you run it on your own hardware; GPT-5.2 is API-only.

Anyone whose priority is strong all-round reasoning

GPT-5.2

It is specifically built for that.

Anyone whose priority is agentic software engineering, code generation, and terminal tasks

North Mini Code

That is its strongest area.

GPT-5.2: where it fits

A capable GPT-5-generation all-rounder, now succeeded by GPT-5.5. Released December 11, 2025 by OpenAI, it is built for strong all-round reasoning, reliable structured output, broad ecosystem and tooling, and professional workflows.

Its trade-offs are real: superseded by GPT-5.5, and smaller context than flagships. At $1.75 in / $14 out per million tokens, it sits in the mid price band.

North Mini Code: where it fits

Cohere's first agentic coding model: an open-weight 30B/3B-active MoE built for real software-engineering and terminal tasks that runs on a single H100. Released June 9, 2026 by Cohere, it is built for agentic software engineering, code generation, and terminal tasks, efficient sparse MoE — 3B active of 30B, runs on a single H100, high throughput (up to 2.8x Devstral Small 2) at low latency, and fully open weights under Apache 2.0 with fp8 and 4-bit builds.

Its trade-offs: text-only and coding-specialized — not multimodal or general-purpose, and 256K context and modest general-intelligence index trail frontier models. As an open-weight model, its running cost is your own hardware rather than a per-token fee.

The bottom line for this matchup

The defining split here is open vs. closed. North Mini Code gives you weights you control — self-host it, fine-tune it, keep data in-house, pay only for hardware. GPT-5.2 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 GPT-5.2 and North Mini Code 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 GPT-5.2 or North Mini Code better for coding?

Public SWE-Bench figures are not available for GPT-5.2, so the honest test is your own repository — run an identical real bug through both. By design, GPT-5.2 leans toward strong all-round reasoning while North Mini Code leans toward agentic software engineering, code generation, and terminal tasks, and that positioning usually predicts which feels better on your codebase.

Which is cheaper, GPT-5.2 or North Mini Code?

North Mini Code is open-weight, so self-hosting means no per-token fee (you pay for hardware instead), while GPT-5.2 is API-metered at $1.75/$14 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?

GPT-5.2 — 400K vs 256K, about 1.6× larger. Useful only if the model actually reasons over the full window, which not all do.

Can I use both GPT-5.2 and North Mini Code together?

Yes — a multi-model platform like LumiChats gives you GPT-5.2, North Mini Code 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, GPT-5.2 or North Mini Code?

North Mini Code — released June 9, 2026, about 6 months after GPT-5.2.

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.