Using OpenHands for refactoring
Multi-file structural changes — rename, extract, inline, reorganize — across hundreds of files with consistent reasoning. The agent task humans get wrong most often.
What OpenHands brings to refactoring
Open-source autonomous coding agent that plans, codes, and ships across full repos.
Within the refactoring workflow, OpenHands stands out for its autonomous autonomy level and integrations with github, docker, shell with an open-source licensing model. The code-category positioning means it competes with adjacent agents in the same buyer-research SERP, but its workflow fit for refactoring specifically is what brings buyers to this page.
For the full editorial review — features, weaknesses, pricing tiers, alternatives, and our Agent Rank scoring breakdown — see the dedicated OpenHands review. This page is the use-case-specific lens; the agent page is the comprehensive product evaluation.
Quick facts
- Category
- Code
- Autonomy
- Autonomous
- Pricing model
- Open source
- Starting price
- Free · OSS
- Capabilities
- code_exec, tool_use, browser_use, multi_agent
- Integrations
- github, docker, shell
Frequently asked
Is OpenHands good for refactoring?+
OpenHands is one of 24 agents in our index that match the refactoring workflow. Open-source autonomous coding agent that plans, codes, and ships across full repos. Its autonomous autonomy level and code-category positioning make it a worth-considering option for this task.
How much does OpenHands cost for refactoring?+
OpenHands is open source — free to self-host. Cloud-hosted plans or paid support tiers may apply.
What are alternatives to OpenHands for refactoring?+
Top alternatives in our index: GitHub Copilot, Windsurf, Cursor Agent. Each solves the same workflow with a different autonomy or integration profile.