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    Microsoft Built Its Own AI Models — and One Already Matches Claude Opus on Coding

    By Amitabh SarkarJune 4, 20264 Mins Read0
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    Microsoft just made its most aggressive move yet against its biggest AI partner. At Build 2026 in San Francisco (June 2–3), the company unveiled four in-house AI models under the MAI brand — and one of them already benchmarks on par with Anthropic’s Claude Opus 4.6 on coding tasks, at a fraction of the cost.

    The models announced are:

    • MAI-Code-1-Flash — Microsoft’s first proprietary coding model, designed for code completion, bug fixing, and autonomous code generation.
    • MAI-Thinking-1 — A reasoning model in private preview through Microsoft Foundry. According to Microsoft, it matches Claude Opus 4.6 on SWE-Bench Pro — the industry’s toughest software engineering benchmark — while costing significantly less per inference.
    • MAI-Image-2.5 — A multimodal image generation and understanding model.
    • MAI-Transcribe-1.5 — A speech transcription model optimized for enterprise meeting workflows.

    Table of Contents

    Toggle
    • Why Microsoft Is Building Its Own Models
    • GitHub Copilot Gets the Upgrade
    • GPT-5.5 Also Lands in Microsoft Foundry
    • What This Means for Developers and Enterprise Teams
    • Related Coverage

    Why Microsoft Is Building Its Own Models

    Microsoft has been OpenAI’s exclusive cloud partner since 2019, committing over $13 billion to the startup. But as OpenAI’s pricing remains high and its roadmap diverges from Microsoft’s enterprise priorities, Redmond has quietly been building an exit ramp.

    “We want to give developers choice,” Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella said at the Build keynote. “The best model for any task isn’t always the most expensive one — and enterprise customers shouldn’t be locked into a single vendor.”

    MAI-Thinking-1 is the most significant of the four. By matching Claude Opus 4.6 on SWE-Bench Pro while running cheaper via Microsoft’s own Azure infrastructure, it gives enterprise customers a reason to route high-volume coding workloads through Microsoft’s stack instead of calling OpenAI’s API at full price.

    GitHub Copilot Gets the Upgrade

    The MAI models aren’t just available via API. GitHub Copilot — Microsoft’s AI coding assistant with over 15 million developers — is being upgraded with autonomous coding capabilities powered by the new models. Copilot can now accept multi-step task descriptions, plan a series of code changes, and execute them across a repository without step-by-step human prompting.

    This puts Copilot in direct competition with Anthropic’s Claude Code, which has become the tool of choice for many developers running autonomous coding workflows. The race for the AI coding market — estimated at over $30 billion by 2028 — just intensified.

    GPT-5.5 Also Lands in Microsoft Foundry

    Alongside the MAI models, Microsoft confirmed that OpenAI’s GPT-5.5 is now generally available through Microsoft Foundry, its enterprise AI deployment platform. This matters because Foundry wraps OpenAI models in Microsoft’s compliance, security, and billing infrastructure — critical for regulated industries like finance and healthcare.

    The combination of proprietary MAI models and OpenAI’s GPT-5.5 in a single platform is a deliberate strategy: Microsoft becomes the neutral AI marketplace, offering the best model for each task without forcing customers to pick a side.

    What This Means for Developers and Enterprise Teams

    For developers already in the Microsoft ecosystem (Azure, GitHub, VS Code, Teams), the MAI models represent a real alternative to calling OpenAI or Anthropic directly:

    • Lower per-token costs for coding workloads via MAI-Code-1-Flash
    • Reasoning at Claude Opus quality via MAI-Thinking-1 (private preview)
    • All models available through Microsoft’s enterprise compliance stack

    For enterprises evaluating AI platforms, this changes the calculus. Until now, a company choosing Azure was still dependent on OpenAI for frontier model quality. Now Microsoft offers a credible in-house option that passes enterprise benchmarks.

    MAI-Thinking-1 remains in private preview via Microsoft Foundry — a waitlist is open. The other three models are available today for Azure customers.

    Our Take: Microsoft building models that benchmark against Claude Opus is a major strategic shift — not just a developer tool launch. It signals that Microsoft no longer views OpenAI as its permanent AI backbone. For developers, the short-term winner is lower prices. For the AI industry, this is the start of serious platform competition that will likely benefit everyone not named OpenAI.

    Related Coverage

    • Claude Opus 4.8 Beats GPT-5.5 on Coding — 3x Cheaper Too
    • GitHub Copilot AI Credits Billing: What Changes Today
    • OpenAI Is Killing GPT-4.5 on June 27 — Here’s What to Do
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    Amitabh Sarkar
    • Website

    I am a software engineer, I have a passion for working with cutting-edge technologies and staying up-to-date with the latest developments in the field. In my articles, I share my knowledge and insights on a range of topics, including business software, how to set up tools, and the latest trends in the tech industry.

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