Head to head

GPT-5 vs Grok 4.3

GPT-5 (OpenAI) and Grok 4.3 (xAI) compared on intelligence, speed, context, and price — and which to choose. Both run on just4o.chat from one chat.

MetricGPT-5Grok 4.3
Intelligence (AA index)4553
Output speed (tokens/sec)100.1168.7
Context window400K1M
Max output1M
Input price / 1M$1.25$1.25
Output price / 1M$10$2.5
Released2025-08-072026-04

Choose GPT-5 if you want…

  • A comparable all-rounder — they trade blows on the headline metrics.

Choose Grok 4.3 if you want…

  • Higher intelligence (Artificial Analysis index 53)
  • Faster output (~168.7 tokens/sec)
  • Lower price ($1.56 / 1M blended)
  • Larger context window (1M)

GPT-5

GPT-5 is OpenAI's unified flagship — a single model that scales its reasoning effort up or down to match the task, rather than making you pick a separate variant. The result shows up most clearly in hard technical work: a perfect AIME 2025 score with tools, 74.9% on SWE-bench Verified, and a 1.6% error rate on medical benchmark HealthBench make it one of the more capable models available for code, math, and domain-specific research. Its 400,000-token context window handles large codebases and lengthy documents without truncation. Users consistently praise the step-up in accuracy and the meaningful reduction in hallucinations over GPT-4o. The honest caveat: GPT-5 trades warmth for precision. Early adopters widely noted that responses are shorter, cooler, and noticeably less conversational than its predecessor — a real shift if personality and back-and-forth rapport matter to your workflow. Latency is also substantial; extended reasoning produces a time-to-first-token around 68 seconds, which rules it out for anything requiring snappy replies.

Full GPT-5 details →

Grok 4.3

Grok 4.3 made a deliberate trade: xAI stopped chasing frontier performance and built something more practical instead. The result is a model that earns its keep through native X/Twitter integration — pulling posts seconds old when news breaks — and a 1 million token context window that handles entire codebases or lengthy regulatory documents in a single pass. At $1.25 per million input tokens, it arrives 40-60% cheaper than its predecessor Grok-4, and users find real value in its DeepSearch mode, which combines live web data with X discussions in a way that rivals Perplexity for current-events research. Frontend developers report genuinely polished web UI output, moving past the "cheap AI demo" look. The honest trade-off: creative writers consistently find it too literal and verbose, and its 16-second time-to-first-token sits at the high end for reasoning models in this price range. If your work is anchored in real-time information or long-document analysis rather than narrative craft, Grok 4.3 offers a focused, cost-sensible tool.

Full Grok 4.3 details →

FAQ

Which is better, GPT-5 or Grok 4.3?

Grok 4.3 leads on 4 of the headline metrics (higher intelligence (artificial analysis index 53); faster output (~168.7 tokens/sec); lower price ($1.56 / 1m blended); larger context window (1m)), while GPT-5 wins on other factors. The right pick depends on your priorities.

Is GPT-5 or Grok 4.3 cheaper?

Grok 4.3 is cheaper at $1.56 per 1M tokens (blended), versus $3.44.

Can I use both GPT-5 and Grok 4.3?

Yes. Both are available on just4o.chat from a single chat — you can switch between them per message with no separate subscriptions.