MicroClaw vs OpenClaw
Side-by-side comparison of two agent options that often come up together when people are choosing between self-hosted frameworks, managed assistants, and extensible AI tooling.
Open source659 stars
MicroClaw
Rust-based agentic AI assistant for multi-channel chat (~7 platforms)
Open source362k stars
OpenClaw
Personal AI assistant you run on your own devices with messaging-app integration
Category
MicroClaw
OpenClaw
Tagline
Rust-based agentic AI assistant for multi-channel chat (~7 platforms)
Personal AI assistant you run on your own devices with messaging-app integration
Deployment
Self-Hosted
Self-hosted / Managed cloud
Pricing
Free to use, with optional model or infrastructure costs if you self-host.
Core framework is free and open source. Self-hosting can stay inexpensive, while OpenClaw Cloud starts around $59/month for a managed experience.
Channels
Telegram, Discord, Slack, WhatsApp, QQ, WeChat, Feishu, Teams, Email
WhatsApp, Telegram, Discord, Slack, iMessage, Signal, SMS, Teams, Email, Web, Voice
Open source
Yes
Yes
Privacy
Good privacy posture for most teams, especially when self-hosted or carefully configured.
Strong privacy when self-hosted, but real-world safety depends on how carefully you configure secrets, network exposure, and model providers.
MicroClaw pros
- Open source with transparent code and flexible deployment options.
- Strong privacy story for users who care where data runs.
- Broad channel coverage makes it easier to meet users where they already work.
OpenClaw pros
- Largest ecosystem in this dataset, with broad model and channel coverage.
- Flexible deployment path: run it yourself or pay for a managed cloud layer.
- Excellent extensibility for custom tools, workflows, and integrations.
MicroClaw cons
- Security posture is weak for high-trust or regulated workflows.
OpenClaw cons
- Initial setup and ongoing hardening are still technical compared to managed tools.
- Bring-your-own-model usage can create hidden ongoing costs if usage grows.
- Channel integrations vary in stability and setup difficulty across platforms.
MicroClaw gotchas
- You should expect ongoing hosting, uptime, and secret-management work if you deploy it for real users.
OpenClaw gotchas
- Managed cloud exists, but the open-source core is still the center of gravity, so documentation often assumes self-hosting knowledge.
- You should treat security as an operator responsibility rather than something fully solved by default settings.
Not sure which one fits you?
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