---
type: Comparison
title: "Claude Sonnet 5 vs GPT-5 (2026): Current-Gen Default vs a Superseded Checkpoint"
description: "Claude Sonnet 5 (GA June 30, 2026) vs GPT-5 in 2026: SWE-bench Pro 63.2%, Terminal-bench 80.4%, intro $2/$10 pricing and the Aug-31 promo cliff — compared against a GPT-5 checkpoint OpenAI has already superseded with GPT-5.6."
resource: "https://www.contextstudios.ai/comparisons/claude-sonnet-5-vs-gpt-5"
category: provider
language: en
timestamp: "2026-07-04T03:06:44.636Z"
---

# Claude Sonnet 5 vs GPT-5 (2026): Current-Gen Default vs a Superseded Checkpoint

This pairing is no longer a like-for-like fight. Claude Sonnet 5 went GA on June 30, 2026 as Anthropic's default model for Free and Pro plans, while GPT-5 is now a superseded 2026 checkpoint — OpenAI has moved on through GPT-5.1, 5.2, 5.4, 5.5 and into the GPT-5.6 Sol/Terra/Luna line. So the honest question for most people searching this comparison is: how does the current-generation Sonnet 5 stack up against a model you probably shouldn't be starting new builds on? Sonnet 5 leads today's coding benchmarks and undercuts GPT-5's list price on intro pricing, but two caveats matter — the intro rate ends August 31, 2026, and the Opus-4.7 tokenizer inflates Sonnet's token counts by up to ~1.35x, eroding the headline advantage.

## Comparison Factors

| Factor | Claude Sonnet 5 (Fennec) | GPT-5 | Winner |
|--------|------|------|--------|
| Release status & currency | GA June 30, 2026 — live default for Free & Pro | Superseded 2026 checkpoint (OpenAI now on GPT-5.6 Sol/Terra/Luna) | a |
| Agentic coding (SWE-bench Pro / FrontierCode) | SWE-bench Pro 63.2%; FrontierCode v1 38.8% (2.6x over Sonnet 4.6) | Strong 2026 coder but a full generation behind current leaders | a |
| API input price (current) | Intro $2 / $10 per 1M tokens (through Aug 31, 2026) | ~$5 / $15 per 1M tokens | a |
| Context window | Fixed 1M-token context | Up to the 1M-token frontier tier | tie |
| Long-horizon terminal agentic | Terminal-bench 2.1 80.4% — ahead of Opus 4.8 (74.6%) | Capable but not benchmarked at the current agentic frontier | a |
| Multimodal & ecosystem breadth | Strong coding focus; growing tool ecosystem | Broad OpenAI multimodal stack and integrations | b |
| Cost predictability | Opus-4.7 tokenizer inflates counts 1.0–1.35x; promo ends Aug 31 (→$3/$15) | Stable, well-known token accounting and flat rate | b |
| Safety & prompt-injection resistance | Browser prompt-injection attacks cut from 31.5% to 0.93% | Standard safeguards; no comparable published figure | a |

## Key Statistics

- Claude Sonnet 5 reached general availability on June 30, 2026 as the default model for Free and Pro plans, with a 1M-token context window and up to 128K output tokens.
- On SWE-bench Pro, Sonnet 5 scores 63.2% versus 58.1% for Sonnet 4.6, while Opus 4.8 still leads the family at 69.2%.
- Sonnet 5 hits 80.4% on Terminal-bench 2.1 — ahead of Opus 4.8 (74.6%) on long-horizon terminal agentic tasks.
- On FrontierCode v1 (real-world open-source PRs) Sonnet 5 scores 38.8% versus 15.1% for Sonnet 4.6 — a 2.6x gain.
- Sonnet 5 intro API pricing is $2 / $10 per 1M tokens through August 31, 2026, then rises to $3 / $15; the Opus-4.7 tokenizer inflates identical text by 1.0–1.35x, narrowing the price edge.
- GPT-5 (~$5 / $15 per 1M tokens) has been superseded inside OpenAI by GPT-5.1 through 5.6; the GPT-5.6 line lists Sol at $5/$30, Terra at $2.50/$15 and Luna at $1/$6.

## Choose Claude Sonnet 5 (Fennec) When

- You want the current-generation default with the strongest 2026 coding benchmarks (SWE-bench Pro, Terminal-bench, FrontierCode).
- You're cost-sensitive and can lock in the intro $2/$10 pricing before the August 31, 2026 promo cliff.
- You run long-horizon terminal or agentic workflows where Sonnet 5 leads even Opus 4.8.
- Browser or agent workflows where prompt-injection resistance (0.93%) is a hard requirement.

## Choose GPT-5 When

- You're already committed to OpenAI's multimodal ecosystem, tooling and integrations.
- You need predictable, well-understood token accounting without tokenizer inflation.
- You have legacy integrations pinned to GPT-5 that don't yet support the 5.6 line.
- For any genuinely new build, evaluate GPT-5.6 (Sol/Terra/Luna) rather than GPT-5 itself.

## Verdict

For any new work in mid-2026, Sonnet 5 is the stronger and more current choice: it's the live default (GA June 30, 2026), it tops the coding benchmarks that matter (SWE-bench Pro 63.2%, Terminal-bench 2.1 80.4% — ahead of Opus 4.8), and it wins on browser/agent safety with prompt-injection resistance dropping attacks from 31.5% to 0.93%. GPT-5 only wins on two honest counts: OpenAI's broader multimodal ecosystem, and more predictable token accounting (Sonnet 5's tokenizer inflates counts 1.0–1.35x and its intro $2/$10 pricing jumps to $3/$15 after Aug 31). But the real caveat is currency: GPT-5 has been superseded inside OpenAI by the GPT-5.6 tier line (Sol $5/$30, Terra $2.50/$15, Luna $1/$6). If you're choosing today, pick Sonnet 5 for coding and agents — and if you're locked to OpenAI, evaluate GPT-5.6, not GPT-5.

## FAQ

**Q: Has Claude Sonnet 5 actually been released?**
A: Yes. Sonnet 5 reached general availability on June 30, 2026 as the default model for Free and Pro plans, and is available across Max, Team and Enterprise. Earlier 'Fennec / Feb 2026' references were pre-launch leak framing and no longer apply.

**Q: Is Sonnet 5 cheaper than GPT-5?**
A: On intro pricing, yes — $2/$10 per 1M tokens versus GPT-5's ~$5/$15. But the promo ends August 31, 2026 (rising to $3/$15), and the Opus-4.7 tokenizer adds 1.0–1.35x more tokens for the same text, so the real-world gap is smaller than list price suggests.

**Q: Which is better for coding?**
A: Sonnet 5 leads current coding benchmarks (SWE-bench Pro 63.2%, Terminal-bench 2.1 80.4%, FrontierCode 38.8%). Opus 4.8 still tops peak accuracy (69.2% SWE-bench Pro), but among this pair Sonnet 5 is clearly the stronger and more current coder.

**Q: Is GPT-5 outdated in 2026?**
A: Effectively, yes — as a purchase decision. OpenAI has moved through GPT-5.1, 5.2, 5.4 and 5.5 into the GPT-5.6 Sol/Terra/Luna line. GPT-5 remains a useful baseline, but new builds should target its successors, not GPT-5 itself.

Keywords: claude sonnet 5 vs gpt-5, next gen ai models, anthropic vs openai 2025
