Compare/MiMo-V2.5-Pro vs Qwen3.6-27B

AI tool comparison

MiMo-V2.5-Pro vs Qwen3.6-27B

Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.

M

AI Models

MiMo-V2.5-Pro

Xiaomi's frontier multimodal agent — 1M context, 57% SWE-bench, $1/M tokens

Ship

75%

Panel ship

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.

Q

Open Source Models

Qwen3.6-27B

27B dense coding model that outperforms models 10x its size on benchmarks

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Paid

Entry

Qwen3.6-27B is a 27-billion-parameter dense language model from Alibaba's Qwen team, released today under an open license. The headline claim is striking: it outperforms the much larger Qwen3.5-397B on major coding benchmarks, achieving what the team calls 'flagship-level coding performance' at a fraction of the parameter count. This follows the broader MoE-to-dense efficiency trend playing out across the open-weights ecosystem. The model targets software engineering tasks specifically — code generation, debugging, repository-level reasoning, and multi-file editing. It's available in full precision and quantized formats on Hugging Face, with community Q4 and Q8 builds already appearing within hours of the release. At 27B parameters in Q4, it fits comfortably on a single consumer GPU, making it practically accessible without enterprise hardware. This release is significant for the local LLM community. Qwen has been one of the most competitive open-weights families for coding tasks, and a 27B dense model that competes with models several times its size changes the cost calculus for self-hosted coding agents, development tooling, and any application where inference cost matters. Expect rapid adoption in tools like Jan, LM Studio, and Ollama.

Decision
MiMo-V2.5-Pro
Qwen3.6-27B
Panel verdict
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
$1/M input tokens
Open Source
Best for
Xiaomi's frontier multimodal agent — 1M context, 57% SWE-bench, $1/M tokens
27B dense coding model that outperforms models 10x its size on benchmarks
Category
AI Models
Open Source Models

Reviewer scorecard

Builder
80/100 · ship

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.

80/100 · ship

A 27B model beating a 397B model on coding benchmarks at Q4 quantization that fits on a single GPU is genuinely exciting. This changes the economics of self-hosted coding agents. I'm testing it in my agentic pipeline immediately. The Qwen team has been consistently delivering quality — this continues that trend.

Skeptic
45/100 · skip

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.

45/100 · skip

'Outperforms on benchmarks' is doing a lot of work here. Coding benchmarks like SWE-Bench and HumanEval measure specific, often narrow task types. Real-world coding agent performance — especially on large, ambiguous codebases — often looks very different from benchmark numbers. Calibrated enthusiasm until we see independent real-world evals.

Futurist
80/100 · ship

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.

80/100 · ship

The efficiency trajectory here is remarkable. A 27B model doing flagship-level coding work signals that the parameter-count ceiling for capable local models is lower than anyone expected two years ago. This democratizes AI-assisted development for individual developers and small teams who can't afford cloud API costs at scale.

Creator
80/100 · ship

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.

80/100 · ship

The local-first angle matters. Running a capable coding model fully offline on your own hardware — with no API costs, no rate limits, and no data leaving your machine — makes AI code assistance viable for freelancers and small studios working with proprietary client code under NDA.

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