Microsoft MAI-Thinking-1
No free tier
- Microsoft FoundryNot disclosed
- Third-party inference (OpenRouter / Fireworks / Baseten)Provider-set

Microsoft MAI-Thinking-1
Our pickIBM Granite 4.0
Tier-list head-to-head. IBM Granite 4.0 takes the A-tier slot — here's the breakdown.
Spec sheet
| Tier | B-tier | A-tierwin |
| Overall score | 7.5 / 10 | 8.2 / 10win |
| Free tier | No | Yeswin |
| Starting price | Not disclosed | $0 |
| Best for | Azure / Microsoft Foundry shops that want a first-party reasoning model without an OpenAI dependency, and d… | Regulated-industry enterprises (healthcare, finance, government) who need Apache 2. |
| Last reviewed | 2026-06-02 | 2026-04-17 |
Head-to-head
Rated 1-10 on the same rubric across all 130 tools we cover.
What you'll pay
Look past the headline number -- entry-tier limits drive most cost surprises.
No free tier
Free tier available
MAI-Thinking-1 (vendor-published 2026-06-02; third-party verification pending) benchmarks — IBM Granite 4.0 has no published benchmarks
| Benchmark | Description | Score |
|---|---|---|
| AIME 2025 | 97% | |
| AIME 2026 | 94.5% |
The decision
Use-case anchors and category strengths, side by side.
Azure / Microsoft Foundry shops that want a first-party reasoning model without an OpenAI dependency, and developers who want a cost-efficient reasoning tier (sparse MoE, 256K context) accessible today through OpenRouter, Fireworks, or Baseten.
Visit Microsoft MAI-Thinking-1Regulated-industry enterprises (healthcare, finance, government) who need Apache 2.0 open-weight models with ISO 42001 certification. Also ideal for edge deployments where Granite Nano (350M / 1.5B) is one of the few open models that runs realistically on CPU. And for any Mamba-hybrid research or low-memory production use where the 70-80% memory reduction actually changes the economics.
Visit IBM Granite 4.0Bottom line
IBM Granite 4.0 edges out Microsoft MAI-Thinking-1 by 0.7 points (8.2 vs 7.5) -- a A-tier vs B-tier split that's narrow but real. Not a blowout; both belong on a shortlist. The score gap shows up most clearly in the categories that matter for IBM Granite 4.0's strengths, so if those categories are your priority, the lead translates.
On pricing, IBM Granite 4.0 starts free while Microsoft MAI-Thinking-1 requires a paid plan from day one (Not disclosed+). If you're testing the waters or running an occasional workload, that gap matters more than the score differential. Microsoft MAI-Thinking-1 starts at Not disclosed; IBM Granite 4.0 starts at $0. Compare what each entry tier actually unlocks before you compare list prices -- the limits matter more than the headline number.
By use case: pick Microsoft MAI-Thinking-1 when azure / microsoft foundry shops that want a first-party reasoning model without an openai dependency, and developers who want a cost-efficient reasoning tier (sparse moe, 256k context) accessible today through openrouter, fireworks, or baseten. Pick IBM Granite 4.0 when regulated-industry enterprises (healthcare, finance, government) who need apache 2. The two tools aren't fighting for the same person -- they're aiming at adjacent jobs that occasionally overlap. If you're squarely in IBM Granite 4.0's lane, the tier-list ranking and the use-case fit point the same direction; if you're in Microsoft MAI-Thinking-1's lane, the score gap matters less than the fit.
Bottom line: IBM Granite 4.0 is the safer default for most readers, but Microsoft MAI-Thinking-1 is competitive enough that the tie-breaker is your specific workload, not the spec sheet.
Keep digging
Full Microsoft MAI-Thinking-1 review
Tier B · 7.5/10
Full IBM Granite 4.0 review
Tier A · 8.2/10
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IBM Granite 4.0 alternatives
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Built from our daily AI-tool sweep, last touched June 2, 2026. Honest tier-list reviews — no affiliate-link pieces disguised as advice. See the rubric or how we review.