Claude 4.5 Sonnet vs Gemini 2.5 Pro: pricing & cost comparison
On input tokens, Gemini 2.5 Pro is the cheaper of the two — 58% less per million ($3 vs $1.25). On output, Gemini 2.5 Pro is 33% cheaper ($15 vs $10) — and since output is usually the dominant cost driver, that gap matters more than it looks.
Side by side
| Claude 4.5 Sonnet | Gemini 2.5 Pro | |
|---|---|---|
| Input / 1M tokens | $3 | $1.25 |
| Output / 1M tokens | $15 | $10 |
| Context window | 200,000 | 1,000,000 |
| Token-count accuracy | ±2% | ±3% |
| Cost — 10,000 input + 2,000 output tokens | $0.06 | $0.0325 |
What a real request costs
Take a representative turn — 10,000 input + 2,000 output tokens. Claude 4.5 Sonnet comes to $0.06, Gemini 2.5 Pro to $0.0325. Across 100,000 requests that's a $2750 swing in favour of Gemini 2.5 Pro. To run the numbers on your actual prompt, paste it into the calculator and toggle Compare across all models.
Which should you pick?
These are different vendors, so a switch means a different API and a slightly different tokenizer — budget a small calibration buffer. OpenAI models give exact counts; the others land within a few percent. See the full breakdown on the dedicated pages for Claude 4.5 Sonnet and Gemini 2.5 Pro.
FAQ
- Is Claude 4.5 Sonnet or Gemini 2.5 Pro cheaper?
- For a typical request (10,000 input + 2,000 output tokens), Gemini 2.5 Pro is cheaper — about 46% less, or roughly $2750 saved per 100,000 requests. Claude 4.5 Sonnet runs $3/$15 per 1M input/output tokens; Gemini 2.5 Pro runs $1.25/$10.
- Which has the larger context window?
- Gemini 2.5 Pro, at 1,000,000 tokens versus 200,000.
- How accurate are these token counts?
- Claude 4.5 Sonnet: Approximated with cl100k_base — drift typically <2% on English and code. Gemini 2.5 Pro: Approximated with o200k_base; drift typically ~3% on English and code. The dollar math itself is exact once the token count is known.