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Free AI Agent Apps

As of June 2026, AIDiveForge tracks 9 free ai agent apps. Curated free ai agent apps tracked by AIDiveForge. Each tool listed is currently free. Listings are verified against each tool's live website and re-checked regularly.

Last updated June 12, 2026 · 9 tools

  1. Ciris

    1. Ciris

    CIRIS runs a signed reasoning agent on your phone or a home device, with no warehouse in the middle for the closest privacy circles. The vendor describes two paths: fully on-device using a small model like Gemma 4, or free hosted inference for phones that can't run a local model — both paths produce cryptographically signed outputs. Every claim the agent makes carries an ed25519+post-quantum signature, so you can audit it, revoke trust, and re-open any conclusion built on a bad source. The architecture depends on a 'social circle' data model; data in your innermost circles never sends the network message that would let anyone request it. Teams needing broad third-party integrations or a hosted API endpoint will find neither here.

    FreeOpen Source
  2. Due Diligence Agents

    2. Due Diligence Agents

    The tool runs parallel analysis across Legal, Finance, Commercial, Technology, Cybersecurity, HR, Tax, Regulatory, and ESG workstreams — domains that siloed consultants hand off sequentially, bleeding weeks in the process. Each agent cross-references findings against the others, so a revenue concentration risk in the commercial workstream gets flagged against the indemnification language in legal without a human manually connecting the dots. Outputs land in Excel and Word with citations intact, ready for an IC memo. The knowledge compounds across deal runs, so repeat buyers in the same sector start with context the first team had to build from scratch. The ceiling appears when your data room contains formats the parser does not handle cleanly — and at that point, teams are pre-processing documents manually before the agents ever see them.

    FreeOpen Source
  3. Extella.AI

    3. Extella.AI

    The structured tool data describes an agentic execution platform from Chariot Technologies Lab., Inc. with primitives called Rules, Concepts, and Experts — built for research automation, cross-system operations, and persistent memory across sessions. The scraped page, however, describes Spotter: a mobile app that identifies landmarks, street food, and wildlife via camera snap and saves them as travel journal entries. There is no matching factual source to ground a production review of the intended tool. Writing a listing from the validator summary alone, without page-sourced specifics on architecture, failure modes, or integration depth, would produce claims that cannot be verified.

    Free
  4. Guildly

    4. Guildly

    Each agent has a fixed role: PM writes PRDs, Manager routes tickets, SDEs work in isolated git worktrees, Reviewer signs off before anything merges. Every action traces back through a chain — line of code to ticket, ticket to PRD, PRD to the #general message that started it. The audit trail isn't a report you run after the fact; it's the structure the system runs on. That structure is also the ceiling: teams needing agents to adapt their process mid-sprint, or handle workflows that don't fit the six-role model, will hit the playbook's edges before long. The tool is in beta, with no API and no self-hosted option, so the surface you can extend is narrow.

    Free
  5. Hermes Agent

    5. Hermes Agent

    Self-improving open-source AI agent with persistent memory, skill learning, and multi-platform access.

    Free
  6. Hermes Desktop

    6. Hermes Desktop

    Hermes Studio is an open-source, self-hosted dashboard that wraps Hermes Agent in a control plane: task scheduling, multi-agent coordination, memory and skill management, cost tracking, and an approval gate for actions you don't want running unsupervised. The vendor describes it as MIT-licensed with no paid tiers, which means every feature ships without a paywall. The architecture assumes you are already running Hermes Agent locally — Hermes Studio is the interface, not the runtime. Teams that need cloud-hosted infrastructure or agents that run without a local Hermes Agent install will hit that wall immediately.

    FreeOpen Source
  7. MagesticAI

    7. MagesticAI

    The platform runs a pipeline of specialized agents — Planner, Coder, QA — that hand off work through isolated Git worktrees, so each task gets its own branch and a bad run does not contaminate the main codebase. You monitor execution in real-time through a web UI, which means you are not staring at terminal logs hoping the right thing happened. The vendor describes cross-session knowledge retention, so the system carries context between separate task runs. The architecture supports multiple LLM providers, which means you are not locked to one API when costs shift. At 78 stars and 184 commits, this is early-stage software — community support is thin and the blast radius of an undocumented breaking change falls entirely on your team.

    FreeOpen Source
  8. NanoClaw

    8. NanoClaw

    NanoClaw is a lightweight, open-source personal AI agent that runs on your own machine, connects to messaging apps like WhatsApp, Telegram, Slack, Discord, and Signal, and is built around just 15 source files you can read in a single sitting.

    Free
  9. SynapCores Agent

    9. SynapCores Agent

    The repo, published by SynapCores under MIT, routes all memory, retrieval, semantic tool selection, and generation through the SynapCores backend — one database as the entire brain. There is no LangChain, no separate vector store, no framework glue to audit or upgrade. The project ships a browser chat widget and a live debug sidebar so you can watch memory recall and tool routing decisions in real time. That transparency is the differentiating feature — and also the boundary: the agent's intelligence rides entirely on the SynapCores backend, whose self-hosted deployment requirements the repo does not fully document. Teams that need the backend running on-premise will hit that wall before they hit a code problem.

    FreeOpen Source

Listings on this page are sourced and verified by the AIDiveForge data pipeline. AIDiveForge is editorially independent — no money changes hands for inclusion.