OpenAI launches GPT-5.6 model family with Sol, Terra, and Luna tiers

OpenAI launches GPT-5.6 model family with Sol, Terra, and Luna tiers

The new three-model lineup offers tiered pricing and capabilities, from flagship research tools to budget-friendly high-volume workhorses

OpenAI has rolled out a new family of models under the GPT-5.6 banner, introducing three distinct variants named Sol, Terra, and Luna, each aimed at a different slice of the market.

The full global release to ChatGPT, Codex, and the API went live on July 9, 2026, following a limited preview that kicked off on June 26, 2026, restricted to U.S. government-approved trusted partners.

Three models, three jobs

Sol is the flagship. It is built for heavy lifting: advanced coding, scientific research, and enhanced cybersecurity applications.

Advertisement

Terra sits in the middle. OpenAI positions it as delivering performance comparable to the previous GPT-5.5 generation, but at roughly half the cost.

Luna is designed for high-throughput, routine tasks where speed and cost efficiency matter more than raw capability.

The pricing math

Sol costs $5 per million input tokens and $30 per million output tokens. Terra comes in at $2.50 input and $15 output, exactly half of Sol across the board. Luna drops further to $1 input and $6 output, making it the most affordable option in the family by a significant margin.

The rollout also comes with enhanced safeguards, particularly around cybersecurity applications and misuse prevention.

About those names

Sol, Terra, and Luna happen to be identical, or nearly identical, to tickers and names associated with well-known blockchain projects: Solana trades as SOL, and the original Terra ecosystem gave the world LUNA before its spectacular collapse in 2022.

OpenAI has not announced any connection to blockchain technology, and nothing in the rollout suggests a link to digital assets. Some speculation has surfaced online, though without any substantive foundation in blockchain development or token announcements.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

OpenAI launches GPT-5.6 model family with Sol, Terra, and Luna tiers

OpenAI launches GPT-5.6 model family with Sol, Terra, and Luna tiers

The new three-model lineup offers tiered pricing and capabilities, from flagship research tools to budget-friendly high-volume workhorses

OpenAI has rolled out a new family of models under the GPT-5.6 banner, introducing three distinct variants named Sol, Terra, and Luna, each aimed at a different slice of the market.

The full global release to ChatGPT, Codex, and the API went live on July 9, 2026, following a limited preview that kicked off on June 26, 2026, restricted to U.S. government-approved trusted partners.

Three models, three jobs

Sol is the flagship. It is built for heavy lifting: advanced coding, scientific research, and enhanced cybersecurity applications.

Advertisement

Terra sits in the middle. OpenAI positions it as delivering performance comparable to the previous GPT-5.5 generation, but at roughly half the cost.

Luna is designed for high-throughput, routine tasks where speed and cost efficiency matter more than raw capability.

The pricing math

Sol costs $5 per million input tokens and $30 per million output tokens. Terra comes in at $2.50 input and $15 output, exactly half of Sol across the board. Luna drops further to $1 input and $6 output, making it the most affordable option in the family by a significant margin.

The rollout also comes with enhanced safeguards, particularly around cybersecurity applications and misuse prevention.

About those names

Sol, Terra, and Luna happen to be identical, or nearly identical, to tickers and names associated with well-known blockchain projects: Solana trades as SOL, and the original Terra ecosystem gave the world LUNA before its spectacular collapse in 2022.

OpenAI has not announced any connection to blockchain technology, and nothing in the rollout suggests a link to digital assets. Some speculation has surfaced online, though without any substantive foundation in blockchain development or token announcements.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.