Qwen3.5-9B

▲ Capable

by Qwen Open Weight Fast Rank #100 of 104

6.2
/ 10

Qwen3.5-9B is a multimodal foundation model from the Qwen3.5 family, designed to deliver strong reasoning, coding, and visual understanding in an efficient 9B-parameter architecture. It uses a unified vision-language design...

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Specifications

Specifications for Qwen3.5-9B
AttributeValue
Lab Qwen
Tags Open Weight Fast
Overall Score 6.2/10
Release Date 2026-03
Context Window 262,144 tokens
Input Price / 1M $0.10
Output Price / 1M $0.15
Input Modalities Text, Image, Video
Output Modalities Text

Strengths

Weaknesses

Best For

In Depth: Qwen3.5-9B

Draft layout · copy TK

Benchmark Performance

[Lead paragraph — ~60 words. Anchor Qwen3.5-9B's overall score of 6.2/10 against the headline benchmarks it actually competes on (MMLU, HumanEval, MATH, GSM8K, LMSYS Arena). Name the closest peers above and below it on this leaderboard so the reader instantly understands the tier.]

[Detail paragraph — ~80 words. Walk through 2–3 specific benchmark numbers with citations: e.g. "scores X on MMLU vs. Y for the next-best model in its class," "Arena ELO of Z places it between A and B." Mention where the model over- or under-performs its overall rank — a 9.0 model that's a 9.5 on coding but a 8.2 on math is the kind of nuance that wins long-tail queries like "Qwen3.5-9B coding benchmark" or "Qwen3.5-9B vs [peer]".]

Pricing & Value

[Lead paragraph — ~50 words. State the input/output prices in plain English ("$0.10 in, $0.15 out per million tokens") and convert to something tangible — cost of a 10k-token analysis, cost of a 1M-token agentic run, cost vs. the cheapest model on the leaderboard.]

[Detail paragraph — ~90 words. Compare Qwen3.5-9B's price-per-point-of-score against 2–3 named peers. Call out whether you're paying for raw intelligence, long context (262,144 tokens here), low latency, or brand premium. Flag any tier discounts, batch pricing, or caching that materially change the effective cost. If this model is overpriced for its score, say so plainly — that honesty is what ranks.]

Who Should Use This

[Lead paragraph — ~50 words. One sentence per persona: the developer building X, the analyst doing Y, the team that already runs Z. Each should resolve to a concrete decision: "pick Qwen3.5-9B if…" and "skip it if…".]

  • [Persona 1 — e.g. "Backend engineers wiring up production agents." One sentence on why this model fits, one on the tradeoff they accept.]
  • [Persona 2 — e.g. "Solo founders prototyping fast." Same structure: why it fits, what they give up.]
  • [Persona 3 — e.g. "Enterprise teams that need a long-context workhorse." Why it fits, the constraint.]
  • [Anti-persona — "Skip Qwen3.5-9B if you're optimizing for X or Y." Be specific; this is the most-cited line in a review.]

Release & Version History

[Lead paragraph — ~50 words. Anchor the 2026-03 release in context: what it replaced inside Qwen's lineup, what the lab claimed it improved, and how those claims held up against independent benchmarks in the weeks after launch.]

[Detail paragraph — ~90 words. Walk the version trail: previous generation, this model, any planned successor or sibling (mini/flash/opus tier). Note pricing or context-window changes vs. the predecessor. Mention deprecation timelines if the lab has announced any — readers searching "Qwen3.5-9B deprecated" or "Qwen3.5-9B successor" land directly here. Close with the editorial verdict: is this the version to standardize on for the next 6 months, or a stopgap?]

Sources & Further Reading

Related Models

Scores are aggregated from public benchmarks (MMLU, HumanEval, MATH, GSM8K, LMSYS) and normalized to a 1–10 scale. Methodology →