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OpenAI shrinks GPT-5.4 for speed and lower costs

New mini and nano models give developers faster AI at a fraction of the price.

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OpenAI is scaling its latest models down to hit a different target, faster responses and much lower costs. The new GPT-5.4 mini and nano are built for developers who care more about responsiveness than squeezing out every last bit of reasoning power.

Both models are available starting today. GPT-5.4 mini runs more than twice as fast as its predecessor while staying close to the full GPT-5.4 on key benchmarks. GPT-5.4 nano takes that further, focusing on simpler tasks like classification and data extraction where efficiency matters most.

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This approach fits apps where speed shapes the experience. Coding assistants, background agents, and real-time vision tools depend on quick feedback, and in those cases a slightly smaller model often delivers a better overall result.

How much performance you actually lose

The performance gap between models is narrower than you might expect. GPT-5.4 mini scores 54.4 percent on SWE-Bench Pro, compared to 57.7 percent for the full model. On OSWorld-Verified, the mini reaches 72.1 percent while the larger version hits 75 percent, keeping the difference tight across tasks.

Costs drop far more dramatically. GPT-5.4 mini is priced at $0.75 per million input tokens and $4.50 per million output tokens, while nano comes in at $0.20 and $1.25. Both models support text and image inputs, tool use, function calling, and a 400,000 token context window, so the lower price doesn’t strip away core capabilities.

In Codex, the mini model uses just 30 percent of the GPT-5.4 quota. That lets developers shift routine coding work to a cheaper tier while saving the full model for harder reasoning.

When smaller models do the heavy lifting

OpenAI is also pushing a multi-model workflow. Instead of relying on one system, developers can split work across tiers, pairing a larger model for planning with smaller ones handling execution.

That setup reflects how many real apps already behave. One model can review a codebase or decide on changes, while another processes supporting data or repetitive steps. The smaller model handles the predictable work, while the larger one focuses on judgment and coordination.

Early feedback suggests this mix is effective. Hebbia CTO Aabhas Sharma reported that GPT-5.4 mini matched or outperformed competing models on several tasks at a lower cost, and in some cases even delivered stronger end-to-end results than the full GPT-5.4.

What to use and when

GPT-5.4 mini is now available across the API, Codex, and ChatGPT. Free and Go users can access it through the Thinking option, while other users may see it as a fallback when they hit limits on GPT-5.4 Thinking.

The nano model is currently limited to the API, aimed at teams running high-volume workloads where cost control is critical. Both models are live today with full documentation available.

For developers building real-time AI features, the shift is clear. Smaller models are now capable enough to handle a larger share of everyday work, which makes choosing the right balance of speed, cost, and capability an increasingly practical decision.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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