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Coder Agents

Paid

Coder Agents lets enterprises run AI coding agents entirely on their own infrastructure - cloud VPC, on-prem or fully air-gapped - so no code, prompts or model traffic leaves the network. It is model-agnostic (Anthropic, OpenAI, Google, Bedrock or self-hosted models), and platform teams control which models developers can use. Agents write code, generate tests, analyse repos and open pull requests via chat or API. Released in beta in May 2026.

ai codingself hostedmodel agnosticgovernanceenterpriseagent

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Our take

Coder Agents targets the reason regulated enterprises hold back on AI coding: keeping code and prompts inside their own network. It runs agents self-hosted, even air-gapped, and stays model-agnostic with central governance. Built on Coder's established self-hosted dev environments, it is credible, though it is enterprise-only, needs real setup, and agent results are still vendor-reported in beta.

Best for

Security- and compliance-bound engineering orgs that want autonomous coding agents but can't send code or prompts to a third-party cloud.

Pros

  • Runs coding agents fully self-hosted, including air-gapped networks
  • Model-agnostic - Anthropic, OpenAI, Google, Bedrock or self-hosted
  • Central governance over which models developers can use
  • Agents open PRs, write tests and analyse repos via chat or API

Cons

  • Enterprise-only and self-hosted, so there is real setup overhead
  • Outcome quality is vendor-reported during the beta (limited evidence)
  • Overkill for individuals or small teams happy with cloud tools

How it compares

Where Cursor, Copilot and Devin run primarily in the cloud, Coder Agents' distinctive bet is self-hosted, governed, model-agnostic execution - built for enterprises that need code and prompts to never leave their own infrastructure.

Full review

Coder Agents lets enterprises run AI coding agents entirely on their own infrastructure - cloud VPC, on-prem or fully air-gapped - so no code, prompts or model traffic leaves the network. It is model-agnostic (Anthropic, OpenAI, Google, Bedrock or self-hosted models), and platform teams control which models developers can use. Agents write code, generate tests, analyse repos and open pull requests via chat or API. Released in beta in May 2026.

Where Cursor, Copilot and Devin run primarily in the cloud, Coder Agents' distinctive bet is self-hosted, governed, model-agnostic execution - built for enterprises that need code and prompts to never leave their own infrastructure.

Cloudkart Trust Graph

3.6/5
  • Actual Utility4/5

    Source: Initial LLM-authored rubric (backfill)

  • Ease of Use3/5

    Source: Initial LLM-authored rubric (backfill)

  • Pricing Fairness3/5

    Source: Initial LLM-authored rubric (backfill)

  • Reliability4/5

    Source: Initial LLM-authored rubric (backfill)

  • Differentiation4/5

    Source: Initial LLM-authored rubric (backfill)

Scored as of . Each score is versioned and auditable; vendors cannot buy it.

How this score is set

Editorial rubric
Primary signal — five dimensions, 3.6/5 average.
Community reviews
None yet.
Pricing verified
Not yet verified
Independence
Score set by our editorial team before any affiliate relationship is considered. No vendor can buy it.

How we keep this independent →

Frequently asked questions

Is Coder Agents free, and how much does it cost?
Coder Agents is a paid tool.
Who is Coder Agents best for?
Security- and compliance-bound engineering orgs that want autonomous coding agents but can't send code or prompts to a third-party cloud.
How is Coder Agents rated on Cloudkart.ai?
Coder Agents scores 3.6 out of 5 on the Cloudkart.ai rubric, which weighs actual utility, ease of use, pricing fairness, reliability and differentiation. Scores are set editorially and can never be bought.

Community reviews

No community reviews yet. Be the first to share how Coder Agents works for you.

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Compare Coder Agents head-to-head: vs Composio · vs LiteLLM · vs Claude Code · vs Kiro