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MagesticAI
Pricing
- Model
- Free
Summary
Running three AI agents at once — one writing code, one reviewing it, one testing it — sounds clean until you realize nothing is coordinating them and one agent's bad output silently poisons the next. MagesticAI is a self-hosted, open-source platform built around exactly that coordination problem, using a Spec-Driven Development model where a Planner agent breaks work into specs before any code gets written.
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.
Bottom line: Pick this if you want a self-hosted, auditable agent pipeline for coding tasks and your team can tolerate owning the ops burden; plan around it if you need enterprise-grade support or a tool your least-technical teammate can debug when an agent goes silent.
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Pros
Sign in to edit- Git worktree isolation per task means a failing agent run is contained to its own branch, so one bad code generation attempt does not corrupt in-progress work in parallel tasks.
- Spec-Driven Development forces a planning step before any code is written, which means agents are working against a defined target rather than interpreting a vague prompt — catching misaligned requirements before they turn into misaligned code.
- Multi-provider LLM support means switching models when an API raises prices or degrades quality is a config-level change, not a re-architecture of the pipeline.
- Self-hosted deployment with Docker means your code, your credentials, and your agent logs stay on your infrastructure — no data leaving to a third-party SaaS during code review or generation runs.
- Real-time agent monitoring in the web UI means you see where a multi-step task stalls without parsing raw terminal output, so you can intervene before a blocked agent burns through token budget on retries.
Cons
Sign in to edit- There is no public API — if your team needs to trigger agent tasks from a CI/CD pipeline, a GitHub Actions workflow, or an external webhook, you are writing against undocumented internals, and a repo update breaks that integration with no migration path.
- At 78 stars and 11 forks, the contributor base is small enough that when the platform breaks on an OS update or a dependency version bump, the fix timeline is whatever the maintainer's schedule allows — teams with production SLAs move to a tool with a paid support tier or a larger community.
- The AGPL-3.0 license requires that any modified version you deploy must be released as open source — teams building proprietary internal tooling that extends or wraps MagesticAI hit a legal constraint before they ship anything, and switch to a permissively-licensed alternative rather than negotiate with their legal team.
- Cross-session knowledge retention is described in the vendor documentation but the mechanism and storage format are not publicly documented in detail — teams that need auditable, queryable memory of past agent decisions cannot verify what is being retained or how to query it outside the UI.
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About
- Platforms
- Ubuntu 24.04 LTS, other recent Linux distributions, macOS (untested), Windows WSL2 (untested)
- API Available
- No
- Self-Hosted
- Yes
- Last Updated
- 2026-06-09T07:50:47.298Z
Best For
Who it's for
- Development teams wanting to orchestrate multiple AI agents for coding
- Teams needing isolated, safe task execution with Git worktree support
- Organizations preferring self-hosted AI task management platforms
- Projects requiring multi-provider LLM flexibility and customization
- Teams valuing terminal access and code editor integration
What it does well
- Automated code generation and task completion with multi-agent coordination
- AI-driven code review and quality assurance workflows
- Managing complex coding projects with isolated Git worktrees
- Monitoring AI agent execution and task progress in real-time
- Cross-session learning and knowledge retention for coding tasks
Integrations
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Frequently Asked Questions
- Is MagesticAI free?
- Yes — MagesticAI is fully free to use. There is no paid tier.
- Is MagesticAI open source?
- Yes. MagesticAI is open source.
- Can I self-host MagesticAI?
- Yes. MagesticAI supports self-hosting on your own infrastructure.
- What platforms does MagesticAI support?
- MagesticAI is available on: Ubuntu 24.04 LTS, other recent Linux distributions, macOS (untested), Windows WSL2 (untested).
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Curated lists that include this category
MagesticAI is a self-hosted, open-source platform for running multi-agent coding pipelines. The core workflow follows what the vendor calls Spec-Driven Development: a Planner agent converts a task description into a formal specification, a Coder agent implements against that spec, and a QA agent validates the result. Each task executes in an isolated Git worktree, so parallel work does not bleed across branches. You interact with the system through a web UI that surfaces agent status and task progress without requiring you to read raw terminal output.
The differentiating design choice is the worktree isolation model. Most multi-agent coding tools let agents write directly to shared state, which means a hallucinated file path or a bad refactor from one agent breaks every subsequent step. By assigning each task its own Git worktree, MagesticAI contains failures at the task boundary — a botched Coder run does not corrupt the spec the Planner already produced. The docs describe terminal and code editor integration, so agents can execute code and inspect results rather than only generating text.
This tool fits teams that want full control over infrastructure and are comfortable self-hosting a system with a small contributor base. The AGPL-3.0 license means any modifications you deploy must also be open-sourced — teams building proprietary internal tooling on top of MagesticAI need to account for that constraint before committing. Multi-provider LLM support means swapping models is a configuration change rather than a migration, which matters when a provider’s API changes pricing or availability. The project has no public API, so if you need to trigger agent tasks from an external CI/CD pipeline or webhook, that integration requires writing directly against the internals.
The repository includes Docker and docker-compose configuration, so deployment follows a container-based path rather than a manual install. The `.env.example` file and secrets management setup suggest the vendor has considered production credential handling, but with 11 forks and no listed enterprise support channel, the documentation and community backing available when something breaks at 2am is limited to what the repo and its small contributor base have already published.
