Skip to main content
AIDiveForge AIDiveForge

Agnt vs Dify

Agnt and Dify are both agent frameworks tracked by AIDiveForge. Below is a side-by-side comparison of pricing, capabilities, platforms, and ownership — sourced from each tool's live website and verified before publishing.

Agnt

Agnt

AGNT is a local-first agent operating system built around an AGI loop: the agent executes a step, evaluates the result, and re-plans before moving forward — without you steering each decision. Persistent memory and skill layers mean context survives across sessions, not just within a single run. The visual workflow designer handles repeatable paths; goal-mode hands the agent an objective and lets it figure out the steps. Self-hosted deployment with Docker keeps data on your own infrastructure, which matters when your legal team has opinions about where prompts and outputs live. The custom license — not OSI-standard — is the detail that stops procurement at some organizations before the first demo.

Dify

Dify

Open-source LLM app development platform combining AI workflow, RAG pipeline, agent capabilities, model management, observability features and more.

AttributeAgntDify
PricingPaidPaid
Price$0 or $333/year per additional user for hosted version$59/mo
Free trialNoNo
Open sourceYesNo
Has APIYesYes
Self-hosted optionYesYes
PlatformsDesktop (Windows, macOS, Linux), Docker, Kubernetes, headless server, VPS, homelab, Raspberry PiDocker, Kubernetes, Linux, macOS, Windows
LanguagesEnglish, Mandarin Chinese, and community translations
Released2023
Pros
  • AGI loop (execute → evaluate → re-plan) means the agent adapts when a step returns an unexpected result, so you aren't rebuilding the workflow every time real data doesn't match the demo assumption.
  • Persistent memory across sessions, so an agent working a multi-step task over hours or days carries context forward — without this, every run starts from zero and you hand-manage state yourself.
  • Local-first Docker deployment with no execution-based billing, which means compliance-sensitive teams can run agents on internal data without renegotiating data processing agreements or watching a cost meter.
  • Goal-mode lets you set an objective and let the agent sequence its own steps, so you aren't manually building every branch for tasks where the path depends on intermediate results.
  • Plugin and subagent architecture allows parallel delegation, so work that can happen simultaneously doesn't queue behind a single-threaded pipeline.
  • Comprehensive all-in-one platform covering workflows, RAG, agents, and observability
  • Visual drag-and-drop interface accessible to non-technical users
  • Extensive LLM support including proprietary and open-source models
  • Self-hosted option with Docker/Kubernetes deployment
  • Backend-as-a-Service with built-in APIs for all applications
Cons
  • The license is a custom non-OSI-standard document — not MIT, Apache, or GPL. Teams at enterprises or funded startups with formal open-source review processes cannot deploy to production until legal clears it, and that process adds weeks to any timeline. Some teams skip the review entirely and move to a competitor with a standard license.
  • Community support is thin: a few hundred stars and a handful of open issues means when you hit an edge case in the re-planning loop or a plugin integration, there is precious little in forums or Stack Overflow to guide you. You are reading source code.
  • The visual workflow designer handles linear and moderately branched paths well; deeply conditional logic — branching based on what the third or fourth agent returned — pushes against what a canvas can express cleanly. Teams building that complexity end up extending with code outside the visual layer, at which point they are maintaining two systems.
  • Restrictive open-source license prohibits developing competing services
  • Multiple workspaces require Enterprise license in self-hosted mode
  • Learning curve for advanced features and custom integrations
Bottom line

Agnt is open source. Choose based on which difference matters most for your workflow.

Comparison data is sourced and verified by the AIDiveForge data pipeline. AIDiveForge is editorially independent.