Side-by-side comparison
Goose vs OpenClaw
vs
Side-by-side comparison based on our agenticness evaluation framework
At a glance
Quick Facts
| Feature | Goose | OpenClaw |
|---|---|---|
| Category | Engineering & DevTools | General-Purpose AI Agents |
| Deployment | On-device / local | Hybrid (cloud + self-hosted) |
| Autonomy Level | Semi-autonomous | Semi-autonomous |
| Model Support | Supports local models | Multi-model |
| Open Source | Yes | Yes |
| MCP Support | Yes | Yes |
| Team Support | Small team | Small team |
| Pricing Model | Free / open source | Freemium |
| Interface | cli | chat, api |
36-point evaluation
Agenticness
18/36
Adaptive Collaborator
Goose
17/36
Adaptive Collaborator
OpenClaw
Dimension Breakdown (0-4 each)
Action Capability
Goose
3
OpenClaw
3
Autonomy
Goose
3
OpenClaw
3
Planning
Goose
3
OpenClaw
2
Adaptation
Goose
2
OpenClaw
3
State & Memory
Goose
1
OpenClaw
3
Reliability
Goose
0
OpenClaw
0
Interoperability
Goose
2
OpenClaw
1
Safety
Goose
1
OpenClaw
0
Scores from our agenticness evaluation framework. Higher is more autonomous.
Features & Use Cases
Goose
Features
- Runs locally on the user's machine
- Supports any LLM
- Allows multi-model configuration
- Connects to external MCP servers
- Connects to external APIs
- Writes and executes code
- Debugs failures
- Orchestrates workflows
Use Cases
- Automating software development tasks end to end
- Debugging code and iterating on failed runs
- Building prototypes or entire projects from scratch
- Migrating or refactoring existing codebases
- Creating scripts or developer utilities
OpenClaw
Features
- Persistent memory across sessions and agents
- Chat-based interaction through messaging platforms
- Background task execution and cron-style scheduling
- Integration with services like Gmail, calendar, and files
- Computer control for actions on a connected machine
- Skill-based extensibility
- Can run tests and open pull requests in coding workflows
- Self-hosting/on-prem deployment mentioned in user reports
Use Cases
- Personal productivity assistant that remembers context across conversations
- Developer workflow automation such as running tests and opening PRs
- Team or company assistant for recurring operational tasks
- Messaging-based assistant in Discord, Telegram, or WhatsApp
- Home or personal-life automation, such as checking metrics or controlling connected devices
Pricing
Goose
- **Free / open source** — full functionality available at no cost.
OpenClaw
Pricing not publicly available
Analysis
Our Verdict
If your priority is autonomous coding and dev-ops-style execution directly on your machine (write/execute code, debug failures, orchestrate workflows, build/refactor projects, and plug into MCP servers/APIs with any LLM), pick Goose; it’s the more developer-task-completion focused tool. If your priority is a persistent, chat-driven assistant that remembers context over time and can run scheduled background tasks across messaging apps and services like Gmail/calendar/files (while still doing developer actions like running tests and opening PRs), pick OpenClaw.
Choose Goose if...
- +Choose Goose if you want an on-machine developer agent that can take a software task end-to-end—e.g., write and execute code, debug failures, and orchestrate multi-step workflows to complete work like building a prototype or refactoring/building projects from scratch.
- +Choose Goose if you need flexibility in your LLM stack: it explicitly supports “any LLM,” multi-model configuration, and can connect to MCP servers and external APIs to wire your engineering tools into the agent.
- +Choose Goose if your workflow is code-centric and you want automation tightly coupled to the dev environment (desktop app or CLI), including generating scripts/developer utilities and iterating based on execution results.
Choose OpenClaw if...
- +Choose OpenClaw if you want a chat-style assistant that feels more like a persistent coworker—designed around autonomous action plus “persistent memory across sessions and agents,” so it keeps context over time while you interact through messaging interfaces.
- +Choose OpenClaw if you want recurring/background automation: it supports background task execution and cron-style scheduling, and can act across connected services like Gmail, calendar, and file access (plus computer control for actions on a connected machine).
- +Choose OpenClaw if you want agent actions routed through collaboration and personal channels (Discord/Telegram/WhatsApp), and still want developer workflow capabilities such as running tests and opening pull requests.