Head-to-head
Claude Code vs Cline: which AI coding assistant wins in 2026?
Claude Code ($20/mo) and Cline (Free) are two of the most-used AI coding assistants in 2026. Across 6 community votes, Cline leads with 71% approval.
Quick verdict
On Code quality, pick Claude Code: the arena rates it 5/5 against 4/5 for Cline. On budget, Cline wins: it starts at Free versus $20/mo for Claude Code.
Line-by-line comparison
Strengths and weaknesses
Claude Code
- Best-in-class agentic coding on Opus 4.8: an estimated 4% of all public GitHub commits are now authored by Claude Code, a share that doubled in a month
- Rated 'most loved' AI coding tool by 46% of surveyed developers in 2026; the average active user spends around 20 hours per week in it
- Terminal-native and editor-agnostic: works alongside any IDE, and subagents, hooks, MCP support and the Agent SDK make it deeply scriptable
- One $20 Pro subscription covers both the Claude apps and Claude Code, with usage shared across them, no separate seat to buy
- Community comparisons on Reddit and HN consistently find it faster than rivals on simple-to-medium agentic tasks
- Explosive validation: revenue grew more than 10x in the three months after full launch, reaching a $2.5B run-rate by February 2026
- Double rate limiting (a rolling 5-hour session window plus a weekly cap) frustrates heavy users; Pro gets roughly 45 prompts per 5-hour window and Opus drains the weekly budget several times faster than Sonnet
- Serious Opus 4.8 usage realistically requires Max at $100 to $200/month; API pay-as-you-go can reach hundreds of dollars monthly for agent-heavy work
- Terminal-first UX has a learning curve versus an IDE: no built-in GUI or visual diff, you lean on your editor and the IDE extensions
- Claude models only: no bringing GPT or Gemini, unlike Cursor and Copilot
Cline
- Genuinely free and Apache 2.0 licensed: 58.2K GitHub stars, 5.8K forks, 297 contributors as of Feb 2026, forkable if the company ever disappears
- Total model freedom (BYOK): Anthropic, OpenAI, Google, AWS Bedrock, GCP Vertex, Groq, DeepSeek, or free local models via Ollama, with inference sold at cost when you use Cline credits
- Near-zero switching cost: uninstall the extension and VS Code is untouched, .clinerules are plain text files in your repo
- Full agentic loop with approval gates: multi-step execution, terminal automation, headless browser testing of UI changes, and MCP marketplace for external tools
- Real-time cost transparency with per-operation token counts, unlike opaque credit systems of hosted builders
- Power-user favorite combo: runs as an extension inside Cursor, adding model freedom and MCP on top of Cursor's completions
- No inline tab autocomplete: it is a task-based agent, not a line-completion tool, so most users pair it with Copilot or Cursor
- BYOK costs are on you and can run away: heavy users report $10-20/day on Opus-tier models, roughly $30-80/month for typical professional use
- Slower than integrated rivals on comparable tasks (one 2026 benchmark measured 90s vs 45s for Cursor) and no background agents or codebase-wide predictive indexing
- Setup requires developer literacy: API keys, model selection and cost monitoring are your job, nothing is one-click
- JetBrains support and fine-grained permissioning are gated behind the Enterprise plan (custom pricing)
Cast your verdict
One recommendation per tool per gladiator. It reshapes the crowd score everyone sees.
The arena’s verdict on Claude Code
If agentic capability is your top criterion, Claude Code is the 2026 default: it tops developer-satisfaction surveys and its 4% share of public GitHub commits speaks for itself. Start on Pro at $20, but expect to hit the weekly cap and to want Max 5x at $100 once you trust it with real work. Skip it if you need a visual IDE experience (take Cursor) or the cheapest possible entry (Copilot at $10). Lock-in to Anthropic models is the price of its polish.
The arena’s verdict on Cline
Cline is the default recommendation for developers who want a serious agentic coder without vendor lock-in: the software costs nothing, every token is billed at provider cost, and you can swap models per task, down to free local Ollama for grunt work. Expect to pay $30-80/month in inference for typical professional use with frontier models, which often beats a $200 IDE subscription while staying fully under your control. Skip it if you want tab autocomplete, background agents or a zero-setup experience: Cursor is faster and more polished for that, and many power users simply run Cline inside Cursor to get both. Non-developers should start with Bolt.new or v0 instead, as Cline assumes you can read the code it writes.
What the crowd says
On Claude Code
“Terminal-only isn't for everyone. I went back to Cursor for UI work, still keep CC for big refactors.”
“Twenty bucks for this level of agent is stupid cheap. Until you hit the weekly cap on a Friday afternoon.”
“Gave it a gnarly migration across 40 files. It planned it, ran the tests, fixed its own mistakes. Sold.”
On Cline
“No tab autocomplete hurts at first, but for multi-file refactors it's the most trustworthy agent I've used. Apache 2.0 means no rug pull.”
“The MCP marketplace plus Plan/Act gates is the right model for agentic coding. I run it inside Cursor and get the best of both.”
“Switched from a $200/mo IDE plan to Cline with my own Anthropic key. Spending about $50/mo in tokens and I can see exactly where every cent goes.”
Keep comparing
Frequently asked questions
Is Claude Code better than Cline?
The crowd currently sides with Cline: 71% recommend it, versus 57% for Claude Code (6 votes). On Code quality, Claude Code rates higher (5/5 vs 4/5). The right pick depends on your use case. The line-by-line comparison on this page breaks down pricing, key specs and arena ratings.
Which is cheaper, Claude Code or Cline?
Cline is cheaper: it starts at Free, while Claude Code starts at $20/mo.
Which has the better free tier, Claude Code or Cline?
Cline does (Entire product is free (Apache 2.0); you pay only model inference), while Claude Code has no free tier.