AI tool comparison
MiMo-V2.5-Pro vs Qwen3.6-35B-A3B
Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.
AI Models
MiMo-V2.5-Pro
Xiaomi's frontier multimodal agent — 1M context, 57% SWE-bench, $1/M tokens
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Paid
Entry
MiMo-V2.5-Pro is Xiaomi's latest and most capable AI model, released April 22, 2026. It combines a 1-million-token context window with multimodal capabilities — vision, audio, and text — in a single agent-ready model. On SWE-bench Pro, it resolves 57.2% of tasks, placing it near the top tier alongside GPT-5.4 and Claude Opus 4.6. What's genuinely surprising isn't the benchmark score — it's the efficiency. MiMo-V2.5-Pro uses roughly 42% fewer tokens than Kimi K2.6 at equivalent benchmark scores, and about 40–60% fewer tokens than comparable frontier models on ClawEval trajectories. That translates directly to lower API costs: the model is priced at approximately $1 per million input tokens. Xiaomi is best known for smartphones and consumer hardware, and MiMo represents a serious pivot into AI services. The company has been quietly building foundation model capabilities for two years, and MiMo-V2.5-Pro is the clearest signal yet that consumer hardware companies won't sit on the sidelines of the foundation model race.
Open Source Models
Qwen3.6-35B-A3B
35B total, 3B active: Alibaba's lean MoE coding beast goes fully open source
75%
Panel ship
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Community
Free
Entry
Alibaba's Qwen team open-sourced Qwen3.6-35B-A3B on April 16, 2026 — a sparse Mixture-of-Experts model with 35 billion total parameters but only ~3 billion active per forward pass. That architectural trick is the whole story: you get near-frontier performance while consuming compute comparable to a 3B dense model. It's available under Apache 2.0 on Hugging Face and ModelScope. The model supports a 262K token context window (extensible to 1M with YaRN), multimodal inputs including text, images, and video, and is purpose-built for agentic coding workflows. On SWE-bench and Terminal-Bench it outperforms the much larger dense Qwen3.5-27B, matching Gemma4-31B on several benchmarks. RefCOCO visual grounding score hits 92.0 — some multimodal metrics reach Claude Sonnet 4.5 territory. Community reaction has been immediate: r/LocalLLaMA lit up with benchmarks showing it solving coding tasks that models with 10x the active parameters couldn't handle. The FP8 quantized variant runs comfortably on a single 24GB consumer GPU, making this the most capable locally-runnable coding agent most developers have ever had access to.
Reviewer scorecard
“Frontier SWE-bench scores at $1/M tokens is a pricing inflection point. If you're building code agents and paying 3-4x that with other providers, MiMo-V2.5-Pro is worth a serious benchmark on your specific workloads. The 1M context window and multimodal support don't hurt either.”
“3B active parameters with 35B parameter breadth is engineering magic. I'm getting near-frontier coding results in Cline and running it locally on a 3090 — the refusals are lower than Claude for security research too. Apache 2.0 means I can fine-tune it on my codebase. This is the best open-source coding model I've used.”
“Xiaomi has virtually no track record in enterprise AI reliability, SLAs, or developer ecosystems. Their API infrastructure is unproven under production load, and 'matching frontier benchmarks' on SWE-bench doesn't mean it'll perform comparably on your actual use case. Wait for the community to stress-test this in production.”
“MoE models have notoriously bad batching throughput — if you're serving this at scale, the economics don't work out. And Alibaba's track record on long-term model support and safety filtering is shakier than Google or Anthropic. It's impressive in isolation, but enterprise teams should pressure-test it before replacing frontier APIs.”
“This is what happens when smartphone makers with massive scale and tight efficiency cultures enter foundation models. Xiaomi's supply chain discipline maps naturally onto token efficiency. Expect more consumer hardware companies — Samsung, OPPO, others — to ship serious frontier-tier models within the next 12 months.”
“The gap between open and closed models is closing faster than anyone predicted. When a freely downloadable model matches Claude Sonnet on multimodal benchmarks, the frontier lab pricing power evaporates. Qwen3.6-35B-A3B is another milestone in the commoditization of intelligence — and commoditization always accelerates adoption.”
“Multimodal at $1/M tokens opens up use cases that were just too expensive before. Vision-capable agents at this price point mean small studios and solo creators can build real production workflows around AI vision without the cost anxiety of frontier model pricing.”
“I don't often care about coding models, but this one handles image + video understanding for design briefs surprisingly well. I used it to analyze a competitor's UI and generate a full redesign spec. The 262K context means I can feed entire brand guidelines without chunking.”
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