
Artificial intelligence (AI) companies often launch major products within a short period of one another, especially as the AI arms race intensifies. That happened last week when SpaceXAI introduced Grok 4.5 just one day before OpenAI unveiled the GPT-5.6 family.
While both companies promoted stronger coding, reasoning, and enterprise capabilities, another part of the announcements quickly drew attention – the cost of using the new models.
The back to back launches have sparked fresh comparisons across the AI industry, where model performance is no longer the only factor businesses consider. Pricing, efficiency, and operating costs are becoming just as important for developers and enterprise customers choosing an AI model.
Grok 4.5 Targets Developers and Enterprise Users
SpaceXAI describes Grok 4.5 as its most capable model so far. The company says it is designed for coding, software engineering, agentic workflows, and other knowledge intensive tasks. According to SpaceXAI, the model was trained alongside Cursor to improve its performance on real software engineering work.
The company has priced Grok 4.5 at $2 per million input tokens and $6 per million output tokens. SpaceXAI also says the model is about twice as token efficient as comparable leading models, which it believes could help lower operating costs for developers running large scale AI applications.
SpaceXAI also shared benchmark results showing Grok 4.5 performing competitively on several software engineering evaluations. The published results also show that some competing models outperform Grok on certain benchmarks, depending on the task being measured.
OpenAI Responds With GPT-5.6
Less than 24 hours later, OpenAI announced the GPT-5.6 family, introducing Sol as its flagship model alongside Terra and Luna, which target different performance and pricing needs.
Early benchmark comparisons from Artificial Analysis, an independent AI benchmarking organization, ranked GPT-5.6 Sol ahead of Grok 4.5 on its Intelligence Index, a benchmark that combines performance across reasoning, coding, mathematics, and other evaluations. However, OpenAI’s flagship model comes at a higher API price than Grok 4.5, creating a clear tradeoff between performance and operating cost.
Why Pricing Has Become Part of the AI Competition
The close timing of both launches naturally invited comparisons between the two models. Over the past year, major AI companies have frequently announced new models within days of one another as competition has accelerated across the industry.
This time, much of the discussion has focused on pricing. At $2 per million input tokens and $6 per million output tokens, Grok 4.5 is priced significantly below OpenAI’s flagship GPT-5.6 Sol, which costs $5 and $30 per million input and output tokens respectively, making Grok 4.5 a lower-cost option for developers building coding, reasoning, and enterprise AI applications.
TechCrunch noted that if Grok 4.5 delivers the performance suggested by SpaceXAI’s published benchmark results, its lower pricing could become one of its strongest advantages for businesses and developers looking to manage AI costs.
Performance Alone May No Longer Decide the Winner
For much of the past two years, AI companies competed mainly by releasing models with stronger reasoning and coding abilities. That competition is now expanding to include efficiency, operating costs, and practical value for businesses deploying AI at scale.
The launches of Grok 4.5 and GPT-5.6 reflect this. While benchmark performance will continue to influence adoption, pricing is becoming an increasingly important part of how companies evaluate AI models. And as more organizations move AI into everyday business operations, the balance between capability and cost is likely to play a larger role in deciding which models see the widest adoption.
