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Claude: Sonnet vs Opus vs Haiku — Which Model to Choose? (2026)

By Learnia Team

Haiku vs Sonnet vs Opus: How to Choose the Right Claude Model

📅 Last updated: March 10, 2026 — Updated data for Haiku 4.5, Sonnet 4.6, and Opus 4.6.

📚 Related articles: Claude Beginner Guide | Claude Opus 4.6 | Claude Opus 4.5


The 3 Models at a Glance

Claude comes in three versions, each optimized for different types of work:


Haiku 4.5: The Sprinter

Haiku is the lightest and fastest model in the Claude family. It's designed for tasks that don't need complex reasoning.

Haiku's Strengths

  • Instant responses — Minimal response time, ideal for quick interactions
  • Maximum efficiency — Consumes the fewest tokens from your rate limit
  • Solid reasoning — Despite its size, it rivals Sonnet 4.0 capabilities

When to Use Haiku

TaskWhy Haiku
Simple questions with short answersNo deep reasoning needed
Categorization and classificationQuick task, binary result
Extracting specific informationTargeted and efficient
Simple summariesQuick synthesis without analysis
Rephrasing and correctionsBasic linguistic work

When NOT to Use Haiku

  • Complex coding tasks (use Sonnet)
  • Long document analysis (use Sonnet or Opus)
  • Multi-step reasoning (use Sonnet or Opus)
  • Deep research (use Opus)

Sonnet 4.6: The Swiss Army Knife

Sonnet is the default model — the one you'll use most often. It combines speed and reasoning power to cover the vast majority of use cases.

Sonnet's Strengths

  • Exceptional coding — Debugging, writing code, refactoring
  • Writing and creation — Articles, emails, presentations
  • Analysis and reasoning — Multi-step, complex workflows
  • Vision and documents — Image analysis, spreadsheet creation, documents
  • Computer Use — Interface control, automation
  • Adaptive extended thinking — Automatically calibrates reasoning depth

When to Use Sonnet

TaskWhy Sonnet
Debugging codeExcellent coding capabilities, fast feedback
Content writingFluent and nuanced writing
Data analysisEfficient multi-step reasoning
Chatbots and supportContext and nuance without overhead
Multi-step workflowsPowerful enough to chain tasks
When in doubtThe default choice → start here

Opus 4.6: The Deep Thinker

Opus is Claude's most powerful model. Reserve it for tasks that genuinely require deep, sustained reasoning.

Opus Strengths

  • Complex reasoning — Multi-step problems requiring extended thinking
  • Deep research — Analysis of long, specialized documents
  • Critical precision — Tasks where accuracy is non-negotiable
  • Adaptive extended thinking — Same intelligent calibration as Sonnet, but with more depth available

When to Use Opus

TaskWhy Opus
Research paper analysisDeep analysis including methodology critique
Complex legal documentsCritical precision, details matter
Advanced math problemsDeep multi-step reasoning
When Sonnet falls shortTest with Sonnet first → Opus if needed

When NOT to Use Opus

  • Simple questions → using the most powerful model is a token waste
  • Routine tasks → Sonnet does the job equally well, faster
  • When your rate limit is tight → Opus consumes significantly more

Adaptive Extended Thinking

One of the major innovations in Sonnet 4.6 and Opus 4.6 is adaptive reasoning. Unlike previous versions that used the same reasoning depth for every request, the 4.6 models adapt:

Simple question: "What's the capital of France?"
→ Immediate response, nearly zero extended thinking tokens

Complex question: "Compare RLHF and DPO approaches for LLM alignment"
→ Deep reasoning, full use of extended thinking

Practical Benefits

  • Token savings — Easy questions no longer waste your rate limit
  • Better quality — Hard questions get more thinking time
  • Transparency — No configuration needed, calibration is automatic
  • Backward compatible — If you already left extended thinking on, you're simply more efficient now

Understanding Rate Limits

Your rate limit caps how many tokens you can use in a given time window. The three models consume differently:

Reading the chart: For the same question, Opus uses roughly 8x more tokens than Haiku and 2.5-3x more than Sonnet. Adaptive extended thinking reduces this gap on simple questions.

Tips for Optimizing Rate Limits

  1. Start with Haiku for simple questions — maximize your interactions
  2. Use Sonnet as default — best quality-to-token ratio
  3. Reserve Opus for truly complex tasks — don't waste it
  4. Leverage adaptive thinking — leave extended thinking on, the model manages itself
  5. Test with Sonnet first — only use Opus when Sonnet falls short

Quick Decision Guide

Decision Tree

Is my task simple? (factual question, short summary, extraction)
  → YES → Haiku 4.5 ✅
  → NO ↓

Does my task involve code, writing, or standard analysis?
  → YES → Sonnet 4.6 ✅
  → NO ↓

Does my task require deep reasoning or exhaustive research?
  → YES → Opus 4.6 ✅
  → NO → Sonnet 4.6 ✅ (when in doubt, Sonnet)

Task-to-Model Mapping

TaskModelReason
"Summarize this email"HaikuSimple extraction
"Debug this React component"SonnetCoding + reasoning
"Write a business proposal"SonnetStructured writing
"Translate this document"Haiku/SonnetHaiku for short text, Sonnet for long docs
"Analyze this CSV dataset"SonnetMulti-step analysis
"Critique this research methodology"OpusSpecialized deep reasoning
"Compare these 3 contracts (50 pages each)"OpusLong documents + critical precision
"Create a PowerPoint presentation"SonnetDocument creation
"Categorize these 100 customer feedbacks"HaikuSimple classification at scale
"Architect a distributed system"OpusComplex multi-constraint design

Plans and Model Access

PlanPriceModelsRate Limit
Free$0Haiku 4.5 + Sonnet 4.6Standard
Pro$20/moHaiku + Sonnet + Opus 4.65x free
Max$100-200/moAll models20x+ free
Team$30/user/moAll modelsTeam limits
EnterpriseCustomAll modelsCustom

Model Evolution

An important point: each new Claude version is a separate training run, not a patch. This means a task that suited Opus 4.5 might work better with Sonnet 4.6, or vice versa.

Tip: When a new model launches, spend a few minutes testing your regular tasks across models. Relative performance shifts from one generation to the next.


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FAQ

What's the difference between Haiku, Sonnet, and Opus?+

Haiku 4.5 is lightweight and fast for simple tasks. Sonnet 4.6 is the versatile daily driver for coding, writing, and analysis. Opus 4.6 specializes in complex reasoning and deep research.

Which Claude model is free?+

The free plan includes Haiku 4.5 and Sonnet 4.6. Opus 4.6 requires a Pro subscription ($20/month) or higher.

What is adaptive extended thinking?+

Sonnet 4.6 and Opus 4.6 automatically calibrate reasoning depth based on question complexity. Simple questions get fast answers without wasting tokens unnecessarily.

How can I optimize my rate limits?+

Use Haiku for simple tasks, Sonnet for daily work, and reserve Opus for truly complex tasks. Adaptive extended thinking also automatically saves tokens.

Can I switch models mid-conversation?+

Yes, you can switch models at any time. Each message uses the model selected when it's sent.

Is Claude better than ChatGPT?+

It depends on the use case. Claude excels at nuanced writing, long document analysis (200K tokens), and complex coding. ChatGPT is stronger for image generation (DALL-E), third-party plugins, and native web browsing. For daily professional work, Claude is often preferred for the quality and accuracy of its responses.

Which is the best AI for coding with Claude?+

For coding, Claude Sonnet 4.6 offers the best quality-to-price ratio with near-Opus performance. Claude Code (the CLI tool) combined with Sonnet 4.6 is the most popular setup for daily development. Opus 4.6 is recommended for complex refactoring and system architecture.