Qwen2.5-Coder-14B vs Trinity-Large-Thinking
Qwen2.5-Coder-14B (2024) and Trinity-Large-Thinking (2026) compare a coding-specialized model against a standalone API model. Qwen2.5-Coder-14B ships a 128k-token context window, while Trinity-Large-Thinking ships a 256k-token context window. This page treats the result as workflow and deployment fit, not a universal model winner.
Treat this as a product-type comparison: Qwen2.5-Coder-14B is coding-specialized model, while Trinity-Large-Thinking is standalone API model. Choose based on workflow fit before reading any benchmark or price row as decisive.
Decision scorecard
Local evidence first| Signal | Qwen2.5-Coder-14B | Trinity-Large-Thinking |
|---|---|---|
| Product type | Coding-specialized model | Standalone API model |
| Best for | custom coding agents and code generation | reasoning-heavy apps, tool-calling agents, and provider-routed production |
| Decision fit | Coding and Long context | RAG, Agents, and Long context |
| Context window | 128k | 256k |
| Cheapest output | - | $0.85/1M tokens |
| Provider routes | 0 tracked | 3 tracked |
| Shared benchmarks | 0 rows | 0 rows |
Decision tradeoffs
- Local decision data tags Qwen2.5-Coder-14B for Coding and Long context.
- Trinity-Large-Thinking has the larger context window for long prompts, retrieval packs, or transcript analysis.
- Trinity-Large-Thinking has broader tracked provider coverage for fallback and procurement flexibility.
- Trinity-Large-Thinking uniquely exposes Reasoning, Function calling, and Tool use in local model data.
- Local decision data tags Trinity-Large-Thinking for RAG, Agents, and Long context.
Monthly cost at traffic
Estimate token spend from the cheapest tracked input and output route or tier on this page.
Qwen2.5-Coder-14B
Unavailable
No complete token price in local provider data
Trinity-Large-Thinking
$389
Cheapest tracked route/tier: OpenRouter
Cost delta unavailable until both models have sourced input and output token prices.
Switch friction
- No overlapping tracked provider route is sourced for Qwen2.5-Coder-14B and Trinity-Large-Thinking; plan for SDK, billing, or endpoint changes.
- Trinity-Large-Thinking adds Reasoning, Function calling, and Tool use in local capability data.
- No overlapping tracked provider route is sourced for Trinity-Large-Thinking and Qwen2.5-Coder-14B; plan for SDK, billing, or endpoint changes.
- Check replacement coverage for Reasoning, Function calling, and Tool use before moving production traffic.
Specs
| Specification | ||
|---|---|---|
| Released | 2024-11-12 | 2026-04-01 |
| Context window | 128k | 256k |
| Parameters | 14B | 400B |
| Architecture | decoder only | Sparse Mixture of Experts (MoE) |
| License | Apache 2.0 | Apache 2.0 |
| Knowledge cutoff | 2024-02 | - |
Pricing and availability
| Pricing attribute | Qwen2.5-Coder-14B | Trinity-Large-Thinking |
|---|---|---|
| Input price | - | $0.22/1M tokens |
| Output price | - | $0.85/1M tokens |
| Providers | - |
Capabilities
| Capability | Qwen2.5-Coder-14B | Trinity-Large-Thinking |
|---|---|---|
| Vision | No | No |
| Multimodal | No | No |
| Reasoning | No | Yes |
| Function calling | No | Yes |
| Tool use | No | Yes |
| Structured outputs | No | Yes |
| Code execution | No | No |
| IDE integration | No | No |
| Computer use | No | No |
| Parallel agents | No | No |
Benchmarks
No shared benchmark rows are currently sourced for this pair.
Deep dive
The capability footprint differs most on reasoning mode: Trinity-Large-Thinking, function calling: Trinity-Large-Thinking, tool use: Trinity-Large-Thinking, and structured outputs: Trinity-Large-Thinking. Both models share the core language-model surface, so the practical split is not just feature count. Use those differences to decide whether the page is about raw model quality, agentic coding support, multimodal ingestion, or predictable structured API behavior.
Pricing coverage is uneven: Qwen2.5-Coder-14B has no token price sourced yet and Trinity-Large-Thinking has $0.22/1M input tokens. Provider availability is 0 tracked routes versus 3. Treat unknown pricing as an integration gap, then verify the route you will actually call before estimating production spend.
Choose Qwen2.5-Coder-14B when coding workflow support are central to the workload. Choose Trinity-Large-Thinking when reasoning depth, larger context windows, and broader provider choice are more important. For production, rerun your own prompts through the exact provider, region, and tool stack you plan to ship. This keeps the decision grounded in measurable tradeoffs instead of brand-level assumptions. It also helps separate model capability from provider packaging, which can change cost and latency. For teams standardizing a stack, that distinction is often the difference between a benchmark win and a reliable deployment.
FAQ
Which has a larger context window, Qwen2.5-Coder-14B or Trinity-Large-Thinking?
Trinity-Large-Thinking supports 256k tokens, while Qwen2.5-Coder-14B supports 128k tokens. That gap matters most for long documents, large codebases, retrieval-heavy agents, and conversations where earlier context must remain visible. Use this as a quick comparison signal, then confirm the provider-specific limits before committing to production.
Is Qwen2.5-Coder-14B or Trinity-Large-Thinking open source?
Qwen2.5-Coder-14B is listed under Apache 2.0. Trinity-Large-Thinking is listed under Apache 2.0. License labels affect whether you can self-host, redistribute weights, or rely only on hosted APIs, so confirm the upstream license before deployment.
Which is better for reasoning mode, Qwen2.5-Coder-14B or Trinity-Large-Thinking?
Trinity-Large-Thinking has the clearer documented reasoning mode signal in this comparison. If reasoning mode is mission-critical, validate it against the provider endpoint because model-level support and API-level exposure can differ.
Which is better for function calling, Qwen2.5-Coder-14B or Trinity-Large-Thinking?
Trinity-Large-Thinking has the clearer documented function calling signal in this comparison. If function calling is mission-critical, validate it against the provider endpoint because model-level support and API-level exposure can differ.
Which is better for tool use, Qwen2.5-Coder-14B or Trinity-Large-Thinking?
Trinity-Large-Thinking has the clearer documented tool use signal in this comparison. If tool use is mission-critical, validate it against the provider endpoint because model-level support and API-level exposure can differ.
Where can I run Qwen2.5-Coder-14B and Trinity-Large-Thinking?
Qwen2.5-Coder-14B is available on the tracked providers still being sourced. Trinity-Large-Thinking is available on Arcee AI, OpenRouter, and Vercel AI Gateway. Provider coverage can affect latency, region availability, compliance posture, and fallback options.
Continue comparing
Last reviewed: 2026-05-22. Data sourced from public model cards and provider documentation.