Z.ai has launched ZCode, a free AI coding tool it describes as an Agentic Development Environment (ADE), built around its flagship GLM-5.2 model. According to press coverage from early July 2026, it is the most aggressive move yet by Z.ai, the Beijing-based lab formerly known as Zhipu AI, into a market currently led by Cursor, Claude Code, and GitHub Copilot.
What ZCode is
ZCode is a coding environment that Z.ai offers for free, powered by GLM-5.2. It runs on macOS, Windows, and Linux, so it is not tied to a single platform. The "Agentic Development Environment" framing signals that it is built around AI agents that can carry out multi-step coding work, rather than a plain autocomplete add-on.
Two design choices stand out. First, ZCode supports bring-your-own-key (BYOK), so you can plug in third-party models rather than being locked to a single provider. Second, it works with multiple models and agents, including Claude Code, Codex, Gemini, and OpenCode, positioning ZCode as a hub you can route different agents through.
Who it is for
ZCode targets developers who want an agentic coding tool without a subscription barrier to entry. Because the app is free and cross-platform, it is easy to try alongside whatever you already use. The BYOK and multi-agent support make it appealing to developers who do not want to commit to one model vendor and prefer to switch between Claude Code, Codex, Gemini, or OpenCode depending on the task.
If you are weighing free options in general, our free AI coding assistants 2026 roundup covers the wider field, and ZCode is a fresh entry worth adding to that shortlist.

What makes it different
The distinctive angle is the combination of free plus GLM-5.2 plus aggressive plan pricing. Most agentic coding environments gate their strongest features behind a paid seat. ZCode inverts that: the tool is free, the flagship GLM-5.2 model powers it out of the box, and the paid GLM Coding Plan is priced to undercut the comparable offers from Claude Code and Cursor rather than match them.
The BYOK, multi-model design is the second differentiator. Rather than lock you into GLM-5.2, ZCode lets you bring your own key and route to Claude Code, Codex, Gemini, or OpenCode, so it can sit on top of the agents you already trust instead of replacing them outright.
How it compares to Cursor, Claude Code and Copilot
Z.ai positions ZCode to compete directly with Cursor, Claude Code, GitHub Copilot, and Google Antigravity. The clearest contrast is price and access:
- ZCode: free tool, GLM-5.2 by default, BYOK and multi-agent support, with a paid GLM Coding Plan that Z.ai frames as undercutting rivals.
- Cursor and Claude Code: established paid environments that ZCode is explicitly priced below on its plan tiers.
For a head-to-head on two of those rivals, see our Cursor vs Claude Code comparison, and for the broader field read our best AI coding assistants 2026 roundup and best coding LLMs 2026 overview. Z.ai did not publish head-to-head benchmark numbers in this launch, so treat the comparison as one of price, access, and openness rather than a performance ranking.
Pricing
ZCode itself is free. Revenue comes through the GLM Coding Plan, which runs from about 16.20 dollars per month on the Lite tier up to 144 dollars per month on the Max tier. Z.ai positions these prices as significantly undercutting comparable offers from Claude Code and Cursor. Plan subscribers also get a 1.5x usage quota bonus. These figures come from press coverage and Z.ai's own framing, so confirm the current tiers on Z.ai's site before committing, and treat the "undercuts rivals" line as Z.ai's positioning rather than an independent price audit.
The bottom line
ZCode matters because it stacks three angles at once: it is a free Agentic Development Environment, it ships with GLM-5.2 by default, and its GLM Coding Plan undercuts Cursor and Claude Code on price while adding a 1.5x usage quota bonus. With BYOK and support for Claude Code, Codex, Gemini, and OpenCode, it is built to route the agents you already use rather than replace them. Z.ai is aiming squarely at Cursor, Claude Code, GitHub Copilot, and Google Antigravity, and for developers the free entry point makes it easy to try.
For related reading, see our Cursor alternatives 2026 guide and, on another open-leaning launch, Kimi K2.7 Code in GitHub Copilot.


