Autonomous AI software engineer that ships PRs end-to-end.
OpenHands alternatives
8 alternatives to OpenHands, ranked by category, capabilities and integration overlap. Click any card to see a side-by-side comparison.
When to consider an alternative to OpenHands
Three signals usually push buyers to look beyond OpenHands: pricing has outgrown the use case, a critical integration is missing, or the autonomy model doesn't match the workload. The shortlist below ranks alternatives by overlap on capability, integrations and category fit, so the closest practical substitutes surface first.
If the only reason to consider a switch is cost, start with the free-tier or open-source options. If the reason is capability, sort by similarity score and check the integration matrix on each agent page. If the reason is autonomy mismatch, drop a level (autonomous → semi-autonomous → copilot) and re-evaluate.
- CodeTool useBrowserMemoryDemo · hover to playWhy this one: same autonomy level as OpenHands
Build and ship full applications from a single prompt — runs in the Replit cloud.
CodeTool useBrowserMemoryDemo · hover to playWhy this one: same autonomy level as OpenHandsOpen-source autonomous coding agent that lives in your IDE.
CodeTool useBrowserDemo · hover to playWhy this one: open source — fully auditableAutonomous "Droid" agent for end-to-end engineering with native AGENTS.md support.
CodeTool useMemoryMulti-agent
Demo · hover to playWhy this one: same autonomy level as OpenHandsAI dev tool that builds entire production apps from spec — formerly GPT Pilot, open-source roots.
CodeTool useMemoryDemo · hover to playWhy this one: open source — fully auditableOSS terminal coding assistant — pair-programs, edits in place, commits as you go.
CodeTool useWhy this one: open source — fully auditableOpenAI’s open-source terminal agent for refactors, audits and migrations.
CodeTool useDemo · hover to playWhy this one: open source — fully auditableGitHub-native agent that turns issues into reviewed pull requests.
CodeTool useMemoryDemo · hover to playWhy this one: open source — fully auditable
Frequently asked
What's the cheapest alternative to OpenHands?+
Sort the shortlist above by price. Open-source options carry $0 license cost but require self-hosting (or bring-your-own model API spend). Free SaaS tiers typically rate-limit features that OpenHands ships unlimited — verify the tier matches your daily volume before switching.
Is there a free alternative to OpenHands?+
Yes — every alternative on this page with an "Open source" or "Free" pricing badge ships a usable free tier or full open-source license. Read the per-agent pricing detail before committing; "free" in this category usually means "free for prototyping" rather than "free in production at scale".
How long does switching from OpenHands take?+
Depends on integration depth. A swap inside the same category (e.g. code agent → code agent) on the same IDE/CRM/stack typically takes 1-3 hours: install the alternative, point it at the same data sources, run a parallel workflow for a week. Cross-category swaps (e.g. semi-autonomous → autonomous) need workflow redesign — plan 1-2 weeks.
Which OpenHands alternative has the most integrations?+
Sort the shortlist by integration footprint — each agent card surfaces its integration count. The widest-footprint alternatives target enterprise stacks (Salesforce, Slack, GitHub, Microsoft 365) first; niche or open-source alternatives often ship fewer native integrations but more extension points.
Is the Agent Rank score relevant when picking an alternative?+
Yes — Agent Rank is the editorial composite across six dimensions (autonomy fit, capabilities, integrations, pricing value, polish, verifiability). For a like-for-like swap, prefer an alternative with similar or higher Agent Rank in the same category. See /methodology for the full scoring rubric.