[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":1701},["ShallowReactive",2],{"blog-post-first-openclaw-agent-five-boring-things":3,"related-posts-first-openclaw-agent-five-boring-things":393},{"id":4,"title":5,"author":6,"body":10,"category":373,"date":374,"description":375,"extension":376,"featured":377,"image":378,"meta":379,"navigation":380,"path":381,"readingTime":382,"seo":383,"seoTitle":384,"stem":385,"tags":386,"updatedDate":374,"__hash__":392},"blog/blog/first-openclaw-agent-five-boring-things.md","Why Your First OpenClaw Agent Should Do 5 Boring Things (Not One Impressive Thing)",{"name":7,"role":8,"avatar":9},"Shabnam Katoch","Growth Head","/img/avatars/shabnam-profile.jpeg",{"type":11,"value":12,"toc":359},"minimark",[13,20,23,26,29,32,35,38,43,46,49,52,55,58,61,65,68,75,81,87,90,97,101,104,110,116,122,128,134,137,146,152,156,159,162,165,168,172,175,178,181,184,187,195,199,202,205,208,216,219,225,229,232,235,238,241,248,251,257,261,264,267,270,278,282,285,288,291,301,304,307,310,314,319,322,327,330,335,338,343,346,351],[14,15,16],"p",{},[17,18,19],"em",{},"The agents people actually keep running in year two aren't the flashy ones. Here's what the survivors look like.",[14,21,22],{},"Someone showed me their first OpenClaw agent last month.",[14,24,25],{},"It was supposed to handle their entire customer support workflow. Read every ticket. Understand sentiment. Pull the customer's full history. Decide whether to escalate. Draft a response in the company's voice. Approve some, flag others, apologize when necessary, upsell when appropriate.",[14,27,28],{},"One agent. Seven responsibilities. Six weeks of building. Two weeks of production testing. They shut it off after nine days because it kept making expensive decisions that a human would have made differently.",[14,30,31],{},"I asked what they were going to build next. They said, \"Something simpler.\"",[14,33,34],{},"That's the lesson. That's the whole post.",[14,36,37],{},"Your first OpenClaw agent should do five boring things, not one impressive thing. Every operator figures this out eventually. Most of them figure it out the expensive way.",[39,40,42],"h2",{"id":41},"the-myth-of-the-impressive-first-agent","The myth of the impressive first agent",[14,44,45],{},"We're in the era of agent demos. Twitter is full of them. You've seen the 90-second clips. An agent plans your week, books your flights, negotiates with your landlord, writes your novel, and files your taxes. It looks incredible.",[14,47,48],{},"Here's the weird part. Almost none of those demos are running in production six months later.",[14,50,51],{},"The agents that survive, the ones people actually keep paying for, are the ones doing unglamorous work in the background. Marking Slack threads as read when the topic's been resolved elsewhere. Tagging incoming support tickets by category. Logging a one-line summary of every new customer signup to a channel. Flagging PRs that haven't been reviewed in 48 hours. Pulling the week's top-voted feature requests into a doc.",[14,53,54],{},"None of those will go viral. All of them compound into real operational value over time.",[14,56,57],{},"The best first agent isn't the one that does the hardest thing. It's the one that does five easy things reliably for three months.",[14,59,60],{},"That's a less sexy thing to tweet. It's also how you actually end up with a working automation stack.",[39,62,64],{"id":63},"why-five-boring-things-beats-one-impressive-thing","Why five boring things beats one impressive thing",[14,66,67],{},"Three reasons, in order of how painfully I've learned them.",[14,69,70,74],{},[71,72,73],"strong",{},"Reliability compounds."," Five small tasks each working 95% of the time gives you real operational lift. One big task working 70% of the time is a liability that needs constant supervision. Small scope makes reliability tractable. Big scope makes it aspirational.",[14,76,77,80],{},[71,78,79],{},"Retreat is cheap."," When one of five boring tasks breaks, you disable that one task and the other four keep working. When your one big ambitious agent breaks, the whole workflow stops and you're back to doing it manually. Modularity is survivability.",[14,82,83,86],{},[71,84,85],{},"You learn what's actually useful."," You don't know what your agent should do yet. You think you do. You don't. Five small deployments teach you which tasks generate real value and which were just cool-sounding ideas. One big deployment teaches you nothing because you can't tell which part was valuable and which part you could have skipped.",[14,88,89],{},"The demos get glory. The boring agents get to year two.",[14,91,92],{},[93,94],"img",{"alt":95,"src":96},"Comparison of five small OpenClaw agent tasks at 95 percent reliability versus one ambitious agent workflow at 70 percent reliability","/img/blog/first-openclaw-agent-five-boring-things-reliability.jpg",[39,98,100],{"id":99},"the-five-boring-things-that-always-earn-their-keep","The five boring things that always earn their keep",[14,102,103],{},"Let me be specific. These are patterns I've seen work across companies, not things I made up.",[14,105,106,109],{},[71,107,108],{},"1. Triage and tagging."," Anything that arrives in a queue (support tickets, inbound emails, new sign-ups, PRs, bug reports) benefits from having an agent read it and add a tag or a label. Agent doesn't need to respond. It just needs to say \"this is category X.\" Five minutes of setup, saves humans 30 minutes a day.",[14,111,112,115],{},[71,113,114],{},"2. Summary and digest."," End-of-day or start-of-day summaries of what happened in a specific channel or system. \"Here's what got decided in #product yesterday.\" \"Here are the five tickets that came in overnight.\" Zero creativity required. Just condensation and formatting.",[14,117,118,121],{},[71,119,120],{},"3. Stale-thing detection."," Flag anything that's been sitting for too long without movement. Unanswered emails over 48 hours old. PRs without a review. Leads that never got a follow-up. Invoices past due. Agents are patient. Humans are not. This pairing is the whole point.",[14,123,124,127],{},[71,125,126],{},"4. Routing and notifications."," An event happens. Agent decides who should know and tells them. Somebody high-value filled out a Typeform. A payment failed. A customer mentioned a competitor in a call transcript. The agent's entire job is \"see this, tell the right person.\"",[14,129,130,133],{},[71,131,132],{},"5. Logging and archival."," End-of-week snapshot of key metrics into a doc. Monthly archive of decisions made in a specific channel. Automatic documentation of what changed. The stuff teams always mean to do and never do.",[14,135,136],{},"None of these require novel reasoning. All of them disappear into your workflow once they're running. Six months in, you'll wonder how you ever operated without them.",[14,138,139,140,145],{},"Look at the ",[141,142,144],"a",{"href":143},"/blog/best-openclaw-use-cases","top OpenClaw use cases"," that have emerged in production deployments across the ecosystem. The common thread isn't raw capability. It's boring things, running quietly, for long periods.",[14,147,148],{},[93,149],{"alt":150,"src":151},"Five boring OpenClaw agent tasks illustrated as icons: triage and tagging, summary and digest, stale-thing detection, routing and notifications, logging and archival","/img/blog/first-openclaw-agent-five-boring-things-tasks.jpg",[39,153,155],{"id":154},"the-summer-yue-lesson","The Summer Yue lesson",[14,157,158],{},"I keep coming back to the Meta incident. Summer Yue, a researcher at Meta, had an agent mass-delete her emails while ignoring stop commands. That's the canonical story of \"first agent goes wrong.\"",[14,160,161],{},"Here's what nobody notices about that story. The agent had too much authority. Not too little skill. Nobody's arguing Summer's agent lacked intelligence. The problem was that its scope included the power to delete things irreversibly, and nothing in the architecture caught the mistake before it propagated.",[14,163,164],{},"That's what you get when your first agent is designed to do one impressive thing instead of five boring ones. Impressive usually requires broad permissions. Broad permissions mean a single bad decision has a large blast radius. Five narrow tasks with narrow permissions give you five small blast radii, each survivable on its own.",[14,166,167],{},"Meta banned OpenClaw internally on work devices after incidents like Summer's. That's not a statement about OpenClaw's quality. It's a statement about how teams were using it. They were reaching for one impressive thing when they should have been building five boring ones.",[39,169,171],{"id":170},"why-everyone-builds-the-wrong-first-agent-anyway","Why everyone builds the wrong first agent anyway",[14,173,174],{},"Stay with me here. You already know the argument. You've nodded along to the whole post. You're still going to want your first agent to do one impressive thing.",[14,176,177],{},"Here's why.",[14,179,180],{},"Founders build impressive first agents because impressive is what they can pitch. Developers build impressive first agents because impressive is what they can show. Ops leads build impressive first agents because impressive is what justifies the budget.",[14,182,183],{},"The boring path loses out every time at the decision table, even though it wins every time in production.",[14,185,186],{},"The trick is to stop pretending you're building a hero product and start pretending you're building a utility. You don't demo a utility. You just notice, six months later, that your team runs 20% smoother and you can't quite remember what life was like before.",[14,188,189,190,194],{},"If your team has never shipped an OpenClaw agent before, the fastest path to \"shipped and running\" is the boring path. ",[141,191,193],{"href":192},"/","BetterClaw lets you ship five small OpenClaw agents instead of one big one",", each with their own scoped skills, encrypted credentials, and auto-pause on anomalies. $29/month per agent, BYOK, and five at $145 total is still cheaper than one developer-week spent wrestling with Docker.",[39,196,198],{"id":197},"the-design-pattern-that-saves-you","The design pattern that saves you",[14,200,201],{},"Here's the specific pattern I'd recommend for every team's first agent rollout.",[14,203,204],{},"Pick a single person in your company who has a day-to-day workflow. Watch them work for an hour. Write down every tiny repetitive thing they do that involves reading something, deciding something trivial, and either notifying someone or marking something as handled.",[14,206,207],{},"That list is your five boring things.",[14,209,210,211,215],{},"For an ops lead, it might be checking the #support channel for new tickets, flagging critical ones, summarizing overnight activity, following up on stale issues, and archiving last week's deployment notes. For a sales lead, it might be triaging inbound form submissions, flagging high-intent leads, summarizing call notes, chasing stale deals, and logging weekly pipeline metrics. For an ecommerce founder, it might be the specific support-and-operations patterns covered in ",[141,212,214],{"href":213},"/blog/openclaw-agents-for-ecommerce","OpenClaw agents for ecommerce",".",[14,217,218],{},"None of these are ambitious. All of them disappear hours of tedium a week once they're running.",[14,220,221],{},[93,222],{"alt":223,"src":224},"Three role-based examples of five boring agent tasks: ops lead support triage, sales lead inbound lead flagging, ecommerce founder order operations","/img/blog/first-openclaw-agent-five-boring-things-roles.jpg",[39,226,228],{"id":227},"the-self-discipline-problem","The self-discipline problem",[14,230,231],{},"The boring path is not technically hard. It's emotionally hard.",[14,233,234],{},"You'll be sitting there in week two, with your agent successfully tagging tickets and summarizing channels, feeling like you haven't built anything impressive enough. You'll want to bolt on one more feature. Then another. Then a big one. By week four, you're back to building the one impressive thing.",[14,236,237],{},"This is how every first agent ends up rebuilt.",[14,239,240],{},"The discipline isn't technical. It's \"don't add the sixth thing until the first five have been running smoothly for a full month.\" That's a product management decision, not an engineering one. Most teams fail the test.",[14,242,243,247],{},[141,244,246],{"href":245},"/blog/openclaw-for-startups","OpenClaw for startups"," has a specific version of this trap, because startups are culturally predisposed to \"ship the impressive thing first.\" I've watched more startup OpenClaw projects die from scope creep than from technical problems.",[14,249,250],{},"The teams that make it past month three are the ones who treat the boring list as sacred and the ambitious ideas as quarterly experiments to bolt on later, only after the foundation is proven.",[14,252,253],{},[93,254],{"alt":255,"src":256},"Timeline showing how teams abandon their first OpenClaw agent when scope creep adds a sixth ambitious task before the first five stabilize","/img/blog/first-openclaw-agent-five-boring-things-scope-creep.jpg",[39,258,260],{"id":259},"when-agents-start-doing-one-big-thing-well","When agents start doing one big thing well",[14,262,263],{},"There's a point at which ambitious agent workflows do become viable. It's not your first agent. It's your third or fourth, after you've learned how your team actually uses them and where the genuinely high-leverage work is.",[14,265,266],{},"Once you've run five boring things reliably for three months, you'll have a much clearer picture of where the real value lives. That's when you build the more ambitious agent. By that point you know exactly which human decisions it's replacing, what the failure modes look like, and where the blast radius has to be bounded.",[14,268,269],{},"The sequence matters. Boring things first. Ambitious things earned.",[14,271,272,273,277],{},"The ",[141,274,276],{"href":275},"/use-cases/operations","operations-focused use cases"," we've seen succeed in the BetterClaw ecosystem all follow this pattern. Nobody's flagship agent is their first agent. The good ones grow out of months of smaller wins.",[39,279,281],{"id":280},"one-last-thing","One last thing",[14,283,284],{},"If you've been avoiding building your first OpenClaw agent because you haven't thought of something impressive enough, I want to give you explicit permission to stop.",[14,286,287],{},"Your first agent should be embarrassing to demo. That's the point. The ceiling of what a first agent should do is \"makes your Monday 10% less annoying.\" Not \"runs your customer success team.\" Not \"replaces your operations lead.\" Not \"autonomously manages your Stripe account.\" Ten percent less annoying, on five small axes, for three months.",[14,289,290],{},"That's what wins. That's what compounds. That's what's still running when this week's viral demo is quietly deleted.",[14,292,293,294,300],{},"If you've been sitting on ideas for boring things an agent could do and want to ship one this weekend, ",[141,295,299],{"href":296,"rel":297},"https://app.betterclaw.io/sign-in",[298],"nofollow","give BetterClaw a try",". $29/month per agent, BYOK, five boring agents cost less than an hour of your time, and your first deploy takes about 60 seconds. We handle the infrastructure. You handle the part where you resist the urge to make it impressive.",[14,302,303],{},"One more thing worth sitting with. The best operators I know all describe their most valuable agents the same way. They describe them as unremarkable. You don't even notice them running. They just make everything slightly smoother, slightly faster, slightly less annoying, and they've been doing it for long enough that nobody remembers life before.",[14,305,306],{},"That's the bar. Not impressive. Unremarkable. Reliable. Essential.",[14,308,309],{},"Start there.",[39,311,313],{"id":312},"frequently-asked-questions","Frequently Asked Questions",[14,315,316],{},[71,317,318],{},"What should my first OpenClaw agent do?",[14,320,321],{},"Your first OpenClaw agent should handle five small, repetitive, low-risk tasks rather than one ambitious one. Good candidates: triaging and tagging incoming messages, generating summary digests, flagging stale items, routing notifications, and logging recurring events. Each task should take under 30 minutes to set up and should replace work that annoys someone on your team daily.",[14,323,324],{},[71,325,326],{},"How does building five boring agent tasks compare to one ambitious agent workflow?",[14,328,329],{},"Five small tasks at 95% reliability give you real daily lift with survivable failure modes. One ambitious workflow at 70% reliability creates a supervision burden that often kills the project. Boring tasks also teach you which work is genuinely high-value before you invest in building something complex.",[14,331,332],{},[71,333,334],{},"How long does it take to deploy a first OpenClaw agent on a managed platform?",[14,336,337],{},"On a managed OpenClaw platform, a first agent handling basic triage or summary tasks takes about 15 to 30 minutes from signup to running, including picking skills and configuring credentials. The first deploy on BetterClaw takes about 60 seconds; the rest is defining what you want the agent to do. Self-hosted setups take significantly longer because you're also configuring infrastructure.",[14,339,340],{},[71,341,342],{},"Is an OpenClaw agent worth the $29/month subscription for small teams?",[14,344,345],{},"For most teams, yes. A single agent replacing 30 minutes of repetitive daily work is already earning its keep at $29/month. Teams usually find that once they have one agent running well, they want three or four. BYOK means your real cost is the API bills from the model providers, not the agent fee itself.",[14,347,348],{},[71,349,350],{},"What happens when an OpenClaw agent gets stuck or confused?",[14,352,353,354,358],{},"Most agents fail by looping or repeating the same action. The fix is setting retry limits, running the agent with a narrow scope so failures have a small blast radius, and monitoring for the patterns described in ",[141,355,357],{"href":356},"/blog/openclaw-agent-stuck-in-loop","why OpenClaw agents get stuck in loops",". Starting with five boring tasks instead of one ambitious one makes failures easier to diagnose and less damaging when they happen.",{"title":360,"searchDepth":361,"depth":361,"links":362},"",2,[363,364,365,366,367,368,369,370,371,372],{"id":41,"depth":361,"text":42},{"id":63,"depth":361,"text":64},{"id":99,"depth":361,"text":100},{"id":154,"depth":361,"text":155},{"id":170,"depth":361,"text":171},{"id":197,"depth":361,"text":198},{"id":227,"depth":361,"text":228},{"id":259,"depth":361,"text":260},{"id":280,"depth":361,"text":281},{"id":312,"depth":361,"text":313},"Strategy","2026-04-20","Your first OpenClaw agent should do five boring things, not one impressive one. Here's the counter-intuitive rule that separates survivors from demos.","md",false,"/img/blog/first-openclaw-agent-five-boring-things.jpg",{},true,"/blog/first-openclaw-agent-five-boring-things","12 min read",{"title":5,"description":375},"Your First OpenClaw Agent: Five Boring Things Win","blog/first-openclaw-agent-five-boring-things",[387,388,389,390,391,246],"first OpenClaw agent","OpenClaw agent strategy","OpenClaw use cases","AI agent design","starting with OpenClaw","nRo_ABNpxh-5_Hfm2L-FWS8mJMVFi3W3-GAVIcIyUnU",[394,889,1399],{"id":395,"title":396,"author":397,"body":398,"category":373,"date":873,"description":874,"extension":376,"featured":377,"image":875,"meta":876,"navigation":380,"path":143,"readingTime":877,"seo":878,"seoTitle":879,"stem":880,"tags":881,"updatedDate":887,"__hash__":888},"blog/blog/best-openclaw-use-cases.md","10 Best OpenClaw Use Cases in 2026 (Ranked by Hours Saved)",{"name":7,"role":8,"avatar":9},{"type":11,"value":399,"toc":857},[400,405,408,411,414,417,422,430,433,437,440,443,450,453,459,465,469,472,475,478,489,495,501,505,508,511,518,521,526,532,536,539,542,545,548,554,558,561,564,567,573,579,585,589,592,595,598,608,611,618,624,628,631,634,640,643,646,652,656,659,665,668,671,677,683,687,690,693,696,702,708,712,715,718,721,724,730,734,737,743,749,755,759,765,768,785,789,792,795,798,801,804,806,811,814,819,822,827,834,839,842,847],[14,401,402],{},[71,403,404],{},"Everyone lists 50+ OpenClaw automations. Nobody tells you which ones matter. Here are the 10 that real users swear by, ranked by actual time saved.",[14,406,407],{},"I counted 85 OpenClaw use cases on one blog. Eighty-five.",[14,409,410],{},"Someone else published 35. Another did 25. There's a GitHub repo that just keeps growing. And every single one of them left me with the same question: where do I actually start?",[14,412,413],{},"Because here's what nobody tells you about OpenClaw use cases: most of them sound incredible in a tweet and fall apart the moment you try to run them for more than a day. The cool ones get the retweets. The boring ones save you actual time.",[14,415,416],{},"I've spent the last several weeks watching what the OpenClaw community is actually building, reading through the showcase on openclaw.ai, digging through GitHub repos, and testing workflows on our own deployments at BetterClaw. What follows is not a dump list. It's the 10 use cases that real people are running in production, ranked by how much time they genuinely save per week.",[14,418,419],{},[71,420,421],{},"Start with one. Get it working. Then expand.",[14,423,424,425,429],{},"That's the pattern every successful OpenClaw user follows. The ones who install 15 ",[141,426,428],{"href":427},"/blog/best-openclaw-skills","skills"," on day one are the ones posting about security nightmares on Reddit two weeks later.",[14,431,432],{},"Let's get into it.",[39,434,436],{"id":435},"_1-the-morning-briefing-save-30-45-minweek","1. The Morning Briefing (Save: 30-45 min/week)",[14,438,439],{},"This is OpenClaw's killer app. The one that makes people say \"wait, it can actually do that?\"",[14,441,442],{},"Every morning at 7 AM, your agent pulls your calendar, scans your email for anything urgent, checks the weather, grabs your top tasks, and sends a formatted briefing to Telegram or WhatsApp before you've opened a single app.",[14,444,445,446,449],{},"Here's why it matters more than it sounds: it's not about the five minutes the briefing saves you each morning. ",[71,447,448],{},"It's about the cognitive load it removes."," You start the day knowing what matters instead of spending 20 minutes context-switching between six apps to figure it out.",[14,451,452],{},"The best implementations include a \"what's most important today\" line that forces the agent to prioritize rather than just list. Light schedule? Short summary. Packed calendar? Detailed breakdown with prep notes for each meeting.",[14,454,455,458],{},[71,456,457],{},"Setup time: 30 minutes. Weekly time saved: 30-45 minutes. Risk level: Low."," This is the use case everyone should start with.",[14,460,461],{},[93,462],{"alt":463,"src":464},"OpenClaw morning briefing use case showing a formatted daily summary delivered to WhatsApp with calendar, email, and weather data","/img/blog/openclaw-morning-briefing.jpg",[39,466,468],{"id":467},"_2-email-triage-and-inbox-automation-save-3-5-hoursweek","2. Email Triage and Inbox Automation (Save: 3-5 hours/week)",[14,470,471],{},"This is the one that saves the most raw time. And it's the one most people are afraid to set up.",[14,473,474],{},"The basic version: your agent scans your inbox every 30 minutes, filters out newsletters and cold pitches, categorizes everything by urgency, and sends you a WhatsApp summary of only the emails that need your attention right now.",[14,476,477],{},"The advanced version: it drafts replies for routine emails, queues them for your approval, and learns from your corrections over time. One user on the OpenClaw showcase reported processing a backlog of 15,000 emails, with the agent unsubscribing from spam, categorizing by urgency, and drafting replies for review.",[14,479,480,483,484,488],{},[71,481,482],{},"The critical rule:"," Never give your agent permission to send emails without your explicit approval. Put it in your ",[485,486,487],"code",{},"SOUL.md",": \"Never send an email without showing me the draft and getting a 'yes' first.\" Start with read-only access. Graduate to draft-and-approve. Never go full autonomous on outbound email.",[14,490,491,494],{},[17,492,493],{},"Security note:"," Use a dedicated email account for this, not your primary inbox. The attack surface is real. 42,000 exposed OpenClaw installations were found by security researchers in early 2026. Don't be one of them.",[14,496,497],{},[93,498],{"alt":499,"src":500},"OpenClaw email triage automation showing inbox categorization by urgency with draft replies queued for approval","/img/blog/openclaw-email-triage.jpg",[39,502,504],{"id":503},"_3-meeting-notes-and-action-item-extraction-save-2-3-hoursweek","3. Meeting Notes and Action Item Extraction (Save: 2-3 hours/week)",[14,506,507],{},"This one hits different if you're in more than three meetings a day.",[14,509,510],{},"Connect OpenClaw to a meeting transcription tool like Fathom. After every external meeting, your agent pulls the transcript, matches attendees to your contacts, extracts action items with ownership (mine vs. theirs), and sends you an approval queue in Telegram.",[14,512,513,514,517],{},"Here's the part that makes it genuinely useful: ",[71,515,516],{},"it tracks both sides",". If someone in the meeting says they'll send you a proposal by Friday, your agent records that as a \"waiting on\" item and checks three times daily whether it's been completed.",[14,519,520],{},"One creator built this to the point where his agent learns from rejected action items. If he says \"no, that wasn't actually an action item for me,\" the agent updates its extraction prompt for next time. Self-improving meeting intelligence. Built from a natural language prompt.",[14,522,523],{},[71,524,525],{},"The compound effect: Your morning briefing pulls from your meeting notes, which feed your CRM, which informs your next meeting's prep. Each use case makes the others more powerful.",[14,527,528],{},[93,529],{"alt":530,"src":531},"OpenClaw meeting notes extraction showing action items sorted by ownership with follow-up tracking","/img/blog/openclaw-meeting-notes.jpg",[39,533,535],{"id":534},"_4-personal-knowledge-base-with-rag-search-save-2-4-hoursweek","4. Personal Knowledge Base with RAG Search (Save: 2-4 hours/week)",[14,537,538],{},"Every interesting article, YouTube video, X post, or PDF you come across, you drop the link into a Telegram topic. Your agent ingests it, chunks it, vectorizes it, and stores it locally in a searchable database.",[14,540,541],{},"Later, when you need to reference something, you ask in plain English: \"show me everything I've saved about AI pricing models\" or \"what was that article about the company that raised $50M for AI safety?\" The agent doesn't just keyword search. It understands meaning.",[14,543,544],{},"The real power shows up when the agent starts cross-referencing. You save an article about a new AI framework, and the agent says \"this relates to something you saved three weeks ago about agent orchestration patterns.\" It connects dots you forgot existed.",[14,546,547],{},"For writers, researchers, and anyone who consumes a lot of information, this changes how you work. Instead of bookmarks you never revisit, you have a living, searchable second brain that gets smarter the more you feed it.",[14,549,550],{},[93,551],{"alt":552,"src":553},"OpenClaw personal knowledge base showing RAG-powered search across saved articles, videos, and documents","/img/blog/openclaw-knowledge-base.jpg",[39,555,557],{"id":556},"_5-custom-crm-built-from-your-existing-data-save-3-5-hoursweek","5. Custom CRM Built From Your Existing Data (Save: 3-5 hours/week)",[14,559,560],{},"This is the use case that makes you question why you're paying for CRM software.",[14,562,563],{},"One power user described building a complete personal CRM through a single natural language prompt. It ingests Gmail, Google Calendar, and meeting transcriptions. It scans everything, filters out noise, uses an LLM to determine which contacts are actually important, and pulls them into a local SQLite database with vector embeddings.",[14,565,566],{},"The result: 371 contacts with full relationship history, interaction timelines, and natural language search. \"What did I last discuss with John?\" \"Who did I talk to at Company X?\" The agent knows because it stores everything locally.",[14,568,569,572],{},[71,570,571],{},"But the really wild part is the proactive intelligence."," Because the CRM sees all your data across sources, it makes connections you wouldn't. Working on a new project? The agent might surface a contact from three months ago who mentioned something relevant. It's not just a database. It's a relationship intelligence system that runs 24/7.",[14,574,575,578],{},[17,576,577],{},"Setup note:"," This is a medium-complexity use case. The Gmail and Calendar integrations need careful permission scoping. Start with read-only access and expand gradually.",[14,580,581],{},[93,582],{"alt":583,"src":584},"OpenClaw custom CRM showing contact relationship history built from email, calendar, and meeting data","/img/blog/openclaw-custom-crm.jpg",[39,586,588],{"id":587},"_6-multi-agent-business-advisory-save-4-6-hoursweek","6. Multi-Agent Business Advisory (Save: 4-6 hours/week)",[14,590,591],{},"This is where OpenClaw stops feeling like a tool and starts feeling like a team.",[14,593,594],{},"The pattern: you create multiple specialized agents (financial, marketing, growth, operations) that each analyze your business data from different angles. They run in parallel, examine everything from channel analytics to email activity to meeting transcripts, and synthesize their findings into a ranked recommendation report delivered to Telegram every night while you sleep.",[14,596,597],{},"One user runs eight parallel specialists across 14 data sources. They discuss, compare findings, eliminate duplicates, and deliver a prioritized action list every morning. Another solo founder runs four named agents with different personalities through a single Telegram chat, each handling strategy, development, marketing, and business operations.",[14,599,600],{},[71,601,602,603,607],{},"The people running ",[141,604,606],{"href":605},"/blog/openclaw-multi-agent-setup","multi-agent setups"," consistently report the highest satisfaction. It's not about any single automation. It's about the compound intelligence of multiple perspectives analyzing the same data.",[14,609,610],{},"This is also one of the most expensive use cases in terms of API costs. Eight agents running frontier models nightly adds up. Use model routing (the ClawRouter skill reportedly cuts costs by about 70%) and assign cheaper models to simpler analysis tasks.",[14,612,613,614,617],{},"If you're building multi-agent workflows and want the infrastructure handled for you, ",[141,615,616],{"href":192},"BetterClaw supports multi-channel agent deployment"," with built-in monitoring and sandboxed execution for each agent instance. No Docker juggling required.",[14,619,620],{},[93,621],{"alt":622,"src":623},"Multi-agent business advisory setup showing specialized agents for finance, marketing, growth, and operations delivering nightly reports","/img/blog/openclaw-multi-agent-advisory.jpg",[39,625,627],{"id":626},"_7-developer-workflow-automation-save-3-5-hoursweek","7. Developer Workflow Automation (Save: 3-5 hours/week)",[14,629,630],{},"For developers, this is where OpenClaw earns its keep.",[14,632,633],{},"The core loop: your agent monitors GitHub for new PRs, analyzes diffs for missing tests and security concerns, sends formatted review summaries to the responsible developer through Slack, and can even generate fix suggestions. Add Sentry integration, and it catches production errors, identifies root causes, and creates issues with full context before your team wakes up.",[14,635,636,637],{},"One developer on the OpenClaw showcase described debugging a deployment failure, reviewing logs, identifying incorrect build commands, updating configs, redeploying, and confirming everything worked. ",[71,638,639],{},"All done via voice commands while walking his dog.",[14,641,642],{},"Another submitted his first Apple App Store submission entirely through Telegram, with the agent automating the entire TestFlight update process he'd never done before.",[14,644,645],{},"The DevOps use cases compound fast: CI/CD monitoring alerts when builds fail. Dependency scanning checks for outdated packages and security vulnerabilities. Automated PR reviews catch convention inconsistencies. Each one saves 15-30 minutes per occurrence, and they add up to hours every week.",[14,647,648],{},[93,649],{"alt":650,"src":651},"Developer workflow automation showing GitHub PR monitoring, Sentry error tracking, and CI/CD alerts through Slack","/img/blog/openclaw-developer-workflow.jpg",[39,653,655],{"id":654},"_8-research-and-negotiation-agent-save-variable-potentially-1000s","8. Research and Negotiation Agent (Save: Variable, potentially $1,000s)",[14,657,658],{},"This is the OpenClaw story that went viral.",[14,660,661,662],{},"A software engineer tasked his agent with buying a car. The agent scraped local dealer inventories, filled out contact forms, and spent several days playing dealers against each other via email, forwarding competing PDF quotes. ",[71,663,664],{},"Final result: $4,200 saved on the purchase price while he slept.",[14,666,667],{},"The pattern works for any major purchase or negotiation. Set parameters (budget, requirements, deal-breakers), and the agent handles research, comparison, and email back-and-forth. For big purchases like cars, appliances, or services, the ROI is obvious. For small purchases, the setup time exceeds the value.",[14,669,670],{},"Other community examples: filing insurance claims through natural language, negotiating apartment repair quotes via WhatsApp, and running competitive pricing analysis across dozens of vendors.",[14,672,673,676],{},[17,674,675],{},"Honest assessment:"," This isn't a weekly time saver. It's an occasional high-value automation that delivers outsized returns when you need it.",[14,678,679],{},[93,680],{"alt":681,"src":682},"OpenClaw research and negotiation agent comparing dealer quotes and automating email negotiations","/img/blog/openclaw-negotiation-agent.jpg",[39,684,686],{"id":685},"_9-content-pipeline-and-social-media-save-3-5-hoursweek","9. Content Pipeline and Social Media (Save: 3-5 hours/week)",[14,688,689],{},"Content creators have embraced OpenClaw harder than almost any other group.",[14,691,692],{},"The full pipeline: your agent monitors trends, identifies content opportunities, does deep research, creates outlines, drafts posts adapted for each platform, and queues everything for your approval. One user described replying \"@Claude, this is a video idea\" in a Slack thread, and the agent automatically researched the topic, searched X trends, created a video outline, and generated a card in Asana with title suggestions, thumbnail concepts, and a full brief.",[14,694,695],{},"Another runs a multi-agent content pipeline in Discord with separate research, writing, and thumbnail agents working in dedicated channels. Yet another automated weekly SEO analysis with ranking reports generated and delivered automatically.",[14,697,698,701],{},[71,699,700],{},"The critical rule here is the same as email: never auto-publish without human review."," The agent handles research and first drafts. You handle quality control and final approval. The output increases without proportional time investment.",[14,703,704],{},[93,705],{"alt":706,"src":707},"Content pipeline automation showing trend monitoring, research, drafting, and multi-platform publishing queue","/img/blog/openclaw-content-pipeline.jpg",[39,709,711],{"id":710},"_10-smart-home-and-life-automation-save-1-2-hoursweek","10. Smart Home and Life Automation (Save: 1-2 hours/week)",[14,713,714],{},"This is the use case that makes OpenClaw feel less like software and more like living in the future.",[14,716,717],{},"Connect your agent to Home Assistant, and it controls lights, locks, thermostats, and speakers through your chat channels. But the real value comes from combining smart home with your other data. \"If I have meetings before 8 AM tomorrow, set my alarm for 6:30 and raise the heat at 6:15.\" That requires calendar awareness plus device control. OpenClaw handles both.",[14,719,720],{},"Community highlights: one user's agent orders groceries from their supermarket when their cleaning lady sends a message about supplies needed. It logs in using shared credentials from 1Password, handles text message MFA through an iMessage bridge, and places items in the cart. Another built a family calendar aggregator that produces a morning briefing for the entire household, monitors messages for appointments, and manages inventory.",[14,722,723],{},"The time saved is modest compared to business use cases. But the quality-of-life improvement is what people consistently call out.",[14,725,726],{},[93,727],{"alt":728,"src":729},"Smart home automation showing Home Assistant integration with calendar-aware thermostat and lighting control","/img/blog/openclaw-smart-home.jpg",[39,731,733],{"id":732},"the-honest-part-what-doesnt-work-yet","The Honest Part: What Doesn't Work (Yet)",[14,735,736],{},"Not everything in the OpenClaw ecosystem lives up to the hype. Here's what I'd skip for now:",[14,738,739,742],{},[71,740,741],{},"Fully autonomous financial trading."," Yes, there are OpenClaw bots running crypto trades. One reported $115K in a week. That's an outlier, and the crypto ecosystem around OpenClaw has been associated with scams. Monitoring and alerts? Great. Autonomous execution with real money? Not yet.",[14,744,745,748],{},[71,746,747],{},"Autonomous outbound communication without approval gates."," The Wired story about an agent tricked by a malicious email into forwarding data is real. Every outbound action (emails, messages, purchases) should require human approval until the security model matures.",[14,750,751,754],{},[71,752,753],{},"Running 10+ use cases simultaneously from day one."," The people getting real, lasting value from OpenClaw are running 2-3 workflows really well. Depth beats breadth every time.",[39,756,758],{"id":757},"run-these-use-cases-without-the-infrastructure-headaches","Run These Use Cases Without the Infrastructure Headaches",[14,760,761],{},[93,762],{"alt":763,"src":764},"BetterClaw managed platform handling OpenClaw infrastructure with one-click deploy and real-time monitoring","/img/blog/betterclaw-use-cases-deploy.jpg",[14,766,767],{},"Every use case on this list requires the same foundation: a machine running 24/7, proper security configuration, Docker sandboxing, credential management, and monitoring. For experimentation, a Mac Mini or VPS works fine. For production workflows you depend on daily, the infrastructure overhead becomes a real job.",[14,769,770,771,775,776,780,781],{},"That's what ",[141,772,774],{"href":773},"/openclaw-alternative","BetterClaw"," is built for. One-click OpenClaw deployment with ",[141,777,779],{"href":778},"/compare/openclaw","Docker-sandboxed execution, AES-256 encryption, and auto-pause health monitoring"," baked in. $29/month per agent, BYOK. You focus on building the use cases. We keep the agent running safely. ",[141,782,784],{"href":783},"/openclaw-hosting","See our managed OpenClaw hosting →",[39,786,788],{"id":787},"the-real-lesson-start-with-one","The Real Lesson: Start With One",[14,790,791],{},"The most successful OpenClaw users I've observed all followed the same pattern. They didn't start with the flashiest use case. They started with the most useful one.",[14,793,794],{},"The morning briefing. Email triage. Meeting notes. Boring? Maybe. But these are the workflows that run every single day. They compound. They feed into each other. And after a week of having them work reliably, you stop thinking about the agent as software and start thinking about it as a teammate.",[14,796,797],{},"That's the moment OpenClaw stops being an experiment and becomes infrastructure.",[14,799,800],{},"Pick one use case from this list. The one that solves a problem you have right now. Get it running. Live with it for a week. Then add the next one.",[14,802,803],{},"The people who built those 85+ use case lists? They started with one too.",[39,805,313],{"id":312},[14,807,808],{},[71,809,810],{},"What are the best OpenClaw use cases for beginners?",[14,812,813],{},"The morning briefing is the best starting point for any new OpenClaw user. It's low-risk (read-only access to calendar and news), quick to set up (about 30 minutes), and delivers immediate daily value. Email triage is the second best choice if you're comfortable granting read access to a dedicated email account. Both use cases build the foundation for more complex workflows later.",[14,815,816],{},[71,817,818],{},"How do OpenClaw use cases compare to ChatGPT or Claude for automation?",[14,820,821],{},"The fundamental difference is that OpenClaw agents are persistent and proactive. ChatGPT and Claude respond when you open a browser tab and type a prompt. OpenClaw runs 24/7 on your machine or a VPS, executes scheduled tasks while you sleep, and takes real actions across your apps (email, calendar, GitHub, smart home). The tradeoff is more setup work and more security responsibility, but the automation depth is significantly greater.",[14,823,824],{},[71,825,826],{},"How long does it take to set up an OpenClaw automation?",[14,828,829,830,833],{},"Simple use cases like morning briefings take about 30 minutes. Medium-complexity workflows like email triage or meeting notes take 1-2 hours including security hardening. Advanced multi-agent setups like the business advisory council can take a full weekend to configure properly. On ",[141,831,774],{"href":832},"/pricing",", the base infrastructure deploys in under 60 seconds, so your time goes entirely into configuring the use case itself rather than managing Docker, YAML, and server setup.",[14,835,836],{},[71,837,838],{},"Is OpenClaw automation worth the API costs?",[14,840,841],{},"For most use cases, yes. A single agent running Claude Sonnet for daily briefings, email triage, and meeting notes typically costs $30-80/month in API fees. The time saved (5-10+ hours per week) easily justifies that for any professional. Multi-agent setups with frontier models cost more, so use model routing (ClawRouter) to assign cheaper models to simple tasks and reserve expensive models for complex reasoning.",[14,843,844],{},[71,845,846],{},"Is it safe to give OpenClaw access to my email, calendar, and business data?",[14,848,849,850,853,854,856],{},"It can be, with proper precautions. Use dedicated accounts (not your primary inbox), start with read-only permissions, add human approval gates for outbound actions, run the agent in a Docker sandbox, never hardcode API keys, and run ",[485,851,852],{},"openclaw doctor"," to audit your security configuration. For teams and businesses, managed platforms like ",[141,855,774],{"href":778}," include enterprise-grade security (sandboxed execution, AES-256 encryption, workspace scoping) by default, significantly reducing the configuration burden.",{"title":360,"searchDepth":361,"depth":361,"links":858},[859,860,861,862,863,864,865,866,867,868,869,870,871,872],{"id":435,"depth":361,"text":436},{"id":467,"depth":361,"text":468},{"id":503,"depth":361,"text":504},{"id":534,"depth":361,"text":535},{"id":556,"depth":361,"text":557},{"id":587,"depth":361,"text":588},{"id":626,"depth":361,"text":627},{"id":654,"depth":361,"text":655},{"id":685,"depth":361,"text":686},{"id":710,"depth":361,"text":711},{"id":732,"depth":361,"text":733},{"id":757,"depth":361,"text":758},{"id":787,"depth":361,"text":788},{"id":312,"depth":361,"text":313},"2026-02-24","What should you actually build with OpenClaw? These 10 use cases save 5-20 hours/week each — ranked by real ROI, with step-by-step setup and security tips.","/img/blog/best-openclaw-use-cases.jpg",{},"18 min read",{"title":396,"description":874},"10 Best OpenClaw Use Cases (2026): Save 5-20 Hours/Week","blog/best-openclaw-use-cases",[389,882,883,884,885,886],"best OpenClaw automations","OpenClaw for business","OpenClaw email automation","OpenClaw daily briefing","OpenClaw CRM","2026-04-02","2edDFuiL5wTOXvIC7eD788CB-dJ2nE8dfIX9AuoYvwk",{"id":890,"title":891,"author":892,"body":893,"category":373,"date":1381,"description":1382,"extension":376,"featured":377,"image":1383,"meta":1384,"navigation":380,"path":1385,"readingTime":1386,"seo":1387,"seoTitle":1388,"stem":1389,"tags":1390,"updatedDate":1381,"__hash__":1398},"blog/blog/claude-code-openclaw-guide.md","Claude Code with OpenClaw: What It Actually Does",{"name":7,"role":8,"avatar":9},{"type":11,"value":894,"toc":1360},[895,900,903,906,909,920,923,927,930,936,942,953,956,961,967,971,974,979,982,993,996,1004,1010,1014,1017,1020,1023,1026,1032,1036,1039,1042,1045,1052,1058,1062,1065,1068,1071,1077,1081,1084,1087,1100,1106,1118,1122,1125,1129,1132,1135,1141,1145,1148,1151,1163,1169,1173,1176,1179,1185,1189,1192,1195,1203,1209,1213,1216,1222,1228,1234,1241,1248,1254,1260,1264,1267,1272,1278,1281,1287,1292,1296,1299,1302,1305,1308,1315,1317,1322,1325,1330,1333,1338,1341,1346,1349,1354],[14,896,897],{},[17,898,899],{},"Claude Code can build your OpenClaw config in minutes. But it can't run your agent. Here's where the line is.",[14,901,902],{},"I asked Claude Code to set up my entire OpenClaw configuration from scratch. Model provider, Telegram bot integration, SOUL.md personality, cron jobs, the works.",[14,904,905],{},"Seven minutes later, I had a working config file, a custom SOUL.md tuned for customer support, and three cron job definitions. All syntactically correct. All in the right directories. All without me opening the OpenClaw docs once.",[14,907,908],{},"Then someone in our Discord asked: \"Can I use Claude Code as my OpenClaw model?\"",[14,910,911,912,915,916,919],{},"And I realized most people confuse what Claude Code does ",[17,913,914],{},"with"," OpenClaw versus what Claude (the model) does ",[17,917,918],{},"inside"," OpenClaw. They're completely different relationships. One builds your agent. The other powers it.",[14,921,922],{},"This guide separates the two, explains what the Claude Code and OpenClaw integration actually looks like in practice, and covers the specific workflows where Claude Code saves you hours of configuration pain.",[39,924,926],{"id":925},"claude-code-and-openclaw-two-tools-one-workflow-zero-overlap","Claude Code and OpenClaw: two tools, one workflow, zero overlap",[14,928,929],{},"Here's the distinction that matters.",[14,931,932,935],{},[71,933,934],{},"Claude Code"," is Anthropic's command-line coding agent. It reads your project files, understands your codebase, writes code, runs terminal commands, and builds things. It's a developer tool. You talk to it in your terminal. It edits files on your machine.",[14,937,938,941],{},[71,939,940],{},"OpenClaw"," is an autonomous agent framework. It connects to chat platforms (Telegram, Slack, WhatsApp), uses AI models to respond to messages, calls tools and skills, and operates continuously. It's a deployment platform. End users talk to it.",[14,943,944,945,948,949,952],{},"Claude Code helps you ",[17,946,947],{},"build"," your OpenClaw setup. Claude (Sonnet, Opus, Haiku) can ",[17,950,951],{},"power"," your OpenClaw agent as the underlying model. These are different things happening at different stages.",[14,954,955],{},"Think of it this way: Claude Code is the contractor who builds the house. Claude Sonnet is the assistant who lives in the house and answers the door.",[14,957,958],{},[71,959,960],{},"Claude Code builds your OpenClaw configuration. Claude the model runs inside your OpenClaw agent. One is a development tool. The other is a runtime dependency. Don't confuse them.",[14,962,963],{},[93,964],{"alt":965,"src":966},"Diagram showing Claude Code as a development tool generating config files, separate from Claude Sonnet powering the OpenClaw agent at runtime","/img/blog/claude-code-openclaw-relationship.jpg",[39,968,970],{"id":969},"what-claude-code-actually-does-for-openclaw-the-useful-part","What Claude Code actually does for OpenClaw (the useful part)",[14,972,973],{},"Once you understand the relationship, Claude Code becomes genuinely powerful for OpenClaw work. Here are the specific tasks where it saves hours.",[975,976,978],"h3",{"id":977},"generating-your-config-from-scratch","Generating your config from scratch",[14,980,981],{},"The OpenClaw config file is a nested JSON structure with model providers, API keys, chat platform settings, security parameters, and agent behavior definitions. Writing it by hand means cross-referencing docs, remembering field names, and getting the nesting right.",[14,983,984,985,988,989,992],{},"Claude Code generates the entire file from a natural language description. Tell it what model provider you want, which chat platform, your context window size, heartbeat frequency, and iteration limits. It reads the OpenClaw project structure, understands the config schema, and produces a complete, valid config. It includes fields you'd forget, like ",[485,986,987],{},"contextWindow",", ",[485,990,991],{},"maxContextTokens",", and the correct API format for each provider.",[14,994,995],{},"The whole process takes about two minutes. Doing it manually from documentation takes 20-40 minutes for a first-timer, and that's assuming you don't introduce a typo that takes another 30 minutes to find.",[14,997,998,999,1003],{},"For the full config structure and what each field does, our ",[141,1000,1002],{"href":1001},"/blog/openclaw-setup-guide-complete","complete OpenClaw setup guide"," walks through the installation in the correct order.",[14,1005,1006],{},[93,1007],{"alt":1008,"src":1009},"Terminal showing Claude Code generating a complete openclaw.json config from a natural language prompt","/img/blog/claude-code-openclaw-config-generation.jpg",[975,1011,1013],{"id":1012},"writing-and-editing-soulmd","Writing and editing SOUL.md",[14,1015,1016],{},"The SOUL.md file defines your agent's personality, behavior rules, and working context. It's the most important file in your OpenClaw setup and the one most people write poorly.",[14,1018,1019],{},"Claude Code is excellent at this because it understands both the Markdown format and the nuance of prompt engineering. Describe your agent's purpose (customer support, research assistant, scheduling bot), its tone (professional, casual, terse), its boundaries (what it should never do, when to escalate), and Claude Code produces a structured SOUL.md with personality traits, behavior rules, edge case handling, and escalation logic.",[14,1021,1022],{},"The difference between a vague SOUL.md and a well-structured one is dramatic. Agents with specific behavioral rules handle edge cases gracefully. Agents with \"be helpful and friendly\" as their entire personality go off-script within the first ten interactions.",[14,1024,1025],{},"Claude Code's output consistently includes sections most people forget: error state behavior (what the agent says when a tool fails), rate limit language (how it communicates when it's pausing), and conversation boundary rules (how to end circular discussions without being rude).",[14,1027,1028],{},[93,1029],{"alt":1030,"src":1031},"Side-by-side comparison of a basic SOUL.md versus a Claude Code generated SOUL.md with structured sections","/img/blog/claude-code-openclaw-soul-md.jpg",[975,1033,1035],{"id":1034},"building-custom-skills","Building custom skills",[14,1037,1038],{},"OpenClaw skills are JavaScript or TypeScript packages that add capabilities. Web search, calendar access, file operations, API integrations. Writing a custom skill means following a specific function signature, handling errors correctly, and registering the skill properly.",[14,1040,1041],{},"Claude Code handles all of this. Describe what you want the skill to do, and it generates the complete skill file with the correct exports, error handling, and configuration. It reads your existing skills, matches the pattern, and produces code that fits your project structure.",[14,1043,1044],{},"This matters because custom skills are often what separate a useful agent from a demo. The agent that checks your Shopify orders, monitors your Stripe dashboard, or queries your internal API is the one that actually saves time. Claude Code reduces the friction of building these custom integrations from hours to minutes.",[14,1046,1047,1048,1051],{},"For guidance on ",[141,1049,1050],{"href":427},"which skills are safe to install and how to vet third-party packages",", our skills guide covers the security checklist alongside the best community options.",[14,1053,1054],{},[93,1055],{"alt":1056,"src":1057},"Claude Code terminal generating a custom OpenClaw skill file with proper exports and error handling","/img/blog/claude-code-openclaw-custom-skill.jpg",[975,1059,1061],{"id":1060},"debugging-config-issues","Debugging config issues",[14,1063,1064],{},"When your OpenClaw gateway won't start, the error messages are often cryptic. A TypeError about undefined properties. A provider field that's technically valid JSON but logically wrong. A missing nesting level that the error trace doesn't clearly identify.",[14,1066,1067],{},"Claude Code reads your config file, spots the problem, and fixes it directly. No searching Stack Overflow. No scrolling through GitHub issues. No guessing which of your 47 config fields has the typo.",[14,1069,1070],{},"In our testing, Claude Code correctly identified and fixed OpenClaw config errors about 85% of the time on the first attempt. The remaining 15% were edge cases where the error was in the interaction between multiple config sections, which usually took one follow-up prompt to resolve.",[14,1072,1073],{},[93,1074],{"alt":1075,"src":1076},"Claude Code identifying and fixing a nested JSON config error in openclaw.json","/img/blog/claude-code-openclaw-debugging.jpg",[975,1078,1080],{"id":1079},"setting-up-model-routing","Setting up model routing",[14,1082,1083],{},"Model routing (using different models for different tasks) requires getting the heartbeat model, primary model, and fallback provider configured correctly. The field names are specific. The nesting is easy to get wrong. And the cost savings from routing correctly are substantial.",[14,1085,1086],{},"Tell Claude Code to route heartbeats to Haiku, use Sonnet for conversations, and fall back to DeepSeek if Anthropic is down. It generates the complete routing configuration. This saves $4-15/month on heartbeat costs alone, depending on your current primary model pricing.",[14,1088,1089,1090,1094,1095,1099],{},"For the full breakdown of ",[141,1091,1093],{"href":1092},"/blog/openclaw-model-routing","how model routing works and how much it saves",", our ",[141,1096,1098],{"href":1097},"/blog/openclaw-api-costs","API cost guide"," covers the cost math across different provider combinations.",[14,1101,1102],{},[93,1103],{"alt":1104,"src":1105},"Claude Code generating model routing config with primary, heartbeat, and fallback providers","/img/blog/claude-code-openclaw-model-routing.jpg",[14,1107,1108,1109,1112,1113],{},"🎥 ",[71,1110,1111],{},"Watch: Claude Code for OpenClaw Configuration and Skill Development","\nIf you want to see Claude Code generating OpenClaw configs and custom skills in real time, including the SOUL.md workflow and how it handles config errors, this community walkthrough covers the full developer experience with practical examples.\n🎬 ",[141,1114,1117],{"href":1115,"rel":1116},"https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=claude+code+openclaw+configuration+setup+2026",[298],"Watch on YouTube",[39,1119,1121],{"id":1120},"what-claude-code-cannot-do-with-openclaw","What Claude Code cannot do with OpenClaw",[14,1123,1124],{},"This is the part that trips people up.",[975,1126,1128],{"id":1127},"it-cant-run-your-agent","It can't run your agent",[14,1130,1131],{},"Claude Code is a development tool. It runs in your terminal during coding sessions. It doesn't run 24/7. It doesn't connect to Telegram. It doesn't respond to Slack messages at 3 AM when your team member in Tokyo needs information.",[14,1133,1134],{},"Your OpenClaw agent needs a runtime environment: a server, a VPS, or a managed platform. Claude Code builds the configuration files. Something else has to actually run the agent.",[14,1136,1137],{},[93,1138],{"alt":1139,"src":1140},"Diagram showing the gap between Claude Code's development phase and the agent runtime phase","/img/blog/claude-code-openclaw-runtime-gap.jpg",[975,1142,1144],{"id":1143},"it-cant-replace-the-deployment-infrastructure","It can't replace the deployment infrastructure",[14,1146,1147],{},"After Claude Code generates your perfect config, you still need to: install Node.js 22+, set up Docker, configure networking, open the right ports, secure the gateway, manage SSL, handle process persistence so the agent restarts after crashes, set up monitoring, and keep everything updated.",[14,1149,1150],{},"This is the part where the 7-minute config generation turns into a 4-8 hour deployment project. Claude Code compressed the configuration work. The infrastructure work is still the same.",[14,1152,1153,1154,1094,1158,1162],{},"For a detailed breakdown of ",[141,1155,1157],{"href":1156},"/blog/openclaw-vps-setup","how much VPS deployment actually costs in time and money",[141,1159,1161],{"href":1160},"/compare/self-hosted","self-hosting comparison"," covers the total cost of ownership.",[14,1164,1165],{},[93,1166],{"alt":1167,"src":1168},"Timeline showing 7 minutes of Claude Code config work followed by 4-8 hours of infrastructure setup","/img/blog/claude-code-openclaw-deployment-timeline.jpg",[975,1170,1172],{"id":1171},"it-cant-monitor-your-running-agent","It can't monitor your running agent",[14,1174,1175],{},"Once your agent is live, you need health monitoring, anomaly detection, spending alerts, and log analysis. Claude Code doesn't provide any of this. It's a coding tool, not an operations platform.",[14,1177,1178],{},"If your agent starts making unexpected API calls at 2 AM, if a skill begins misbehaving, if your token usage spikes from a runaway loop, you need runtime monitoring. Claude Code can't help because it's not running when these problems occur.",[14,1180,1181],{},[93,1182],{"alt":1183,"src":1184},"Split screen showing Claude Code terminal closed at night versus agent running unmonitored","/img/blog/claude-code-openclaw-no-monitoring.jpg",[975,1186,1188],{"id":1187},"it-cant-handle-security-at-runtime","It can't handle security at runtime",[14,1190,1191],{},"Claude Code can help you write a secure config (setting maxIterations, configuring authentication, restricting file access). But runtime security requires active enforcement: Docker sandboxing for skill execution, encrypted credential storage, workspace scoping so the agent can't access files outside its boundary, and anomaly detection to pause the agent if something looks wrong.",[14,1193,1194],{},"These are infrastructure concerns, not development concerns. Claude Code operates in the development phase. Security enforcement happens in the runtime phase.",[14,1196,1197,1198,1202],{},"For the full picture of what runtime security requires, our ",[141,1199,1201],{"href":1200},"/blog/openclaw-security-risks","OpenClaw security guide"," covers every documented vulnerability and the infrastructure needed to address each one.",[14,1204,1205],{},[93,1206],{"alt":1207,"src":1208},"Comparison of development-time security config versus runtime security enforcement layers","/img/blog/claude-code-openclaw-security-layers.jpg",[39,1210,1212],{"id":1211},"the-practical-workflow-claude-code-to-deployed-agent","The practical workflow: Claude Code to deployed agent",[14,1214,1215],{},"Here's the sequence that actually works.",[14,1217,1218,1221],{},[71,1219,1220],{},"Step 1:"," Use Claude Code to generate your OpenClaw config, SOUL.md, and any custom skills. This takes 15-30 minutes for a complete setup.",[14,1223,1224,1227],{},[71,1225,1226],{},"Step 2:"," Test locally. Start the OpenClaw gateway on your machine, connect a test Telegram bot, verify the agent responds correctly. Claude Code can help debug any issues at this stage.",[14,1229,1230,1233],{},[71,1231,1232],{},"Step 3:"," Deploy to production. This is where you choose your path.",[14,1235,1236,1237,1240],{},"Self-hosting means moving those files to a VPS, setting up Docker, configuring the firewall, and building the monitoring yourself. Expect 4-8 hours for a first-time setup (experienced developers: 2-4 hours). Our ",[141,1238,1239],{"href":778},"infrastructure comparison"," breaks down the specifics of each hosting option.",[14,1242,1243,1244,1247],{},"If the deployment and ongoing maintenance overhead isn't how you want to spend your time, ",[141,1245,1246],{"href":192},"Better Claw deploys your agent in 60 seconds",". Upload your config and SOUL.md (or configure through the dashboard), connect your API keys, and your agent is live on all 15+ supported chat platforms. $29/month per agent, BYOK. Docker-sandboxed execution, AES-256 encryption, health monitoring, and auto-pause on anomalies are included. The config Claude Code generated works directly in BetterClaw with no modifications.",[14,1249,1250,1253],{},[71,1251,1252],{},"Step 4:"," Iterate. As you refine your agent's behavior, use Claude Code to edit the SOUL.md, add new skills, or adjust the model routing. Push changes to your deployment. The development loop continues even after the agent is live.",[14,1255,1256],{},[93,1257],{"alt":1258,"src":1259},"Four-step workflow diagram from Claude Code config generation through testing, deployment, and iteration","/img/blog/claude-code-openclaw-workflow.jpg",[39,1261,1263],{"id":1262},"claude-the-model-vs-claude-code-the-cost-question","Claude the model vs Claude Code: the cost question",[14,1265,1266],{},"People also confuse the cost structure. Here's the breakdown.",[14,1268,1269,1271],{},[71,1270,934],{}," requires a Claude Pro or Team subscription ($20/month for Pro). You use it during development. It's a fixed cost regardless of how much you build.",[14,1273,1274,1277],{},[71,1275,1276],{},"Claude as your OpenClaw model"," (Sonnet, Opus, Haiku) is billed per token through Anthropic's API. This is the ongoing runtime cost. Claude Sonnet runs roughly $3/$15 per million tokens (input/output). Claude Haiku is $1/$5 per million tokens. Claude Opus is $15/$75 per million tokens.",[14,1279,1280],{},"For most OpenClaw agents, Sonnet is the sweet spot between cost and capability. Opus is overkill for 90% of agent tasks. Haiku works for simple interactions and heartbeats but struggles with complex multi-step reasoning.",[14,1282,1283,1284,1286],{},"For the full cost-per-task data across all providers, our ",[141,1285,1098],{"href":1097}," has real dollar figures for seven common agent tasks.",[14,1288,1289],{},[71,1290,1291],{},"Claude Code is a development cost ($20/month flat). Claude as your OpenClaw model is an operational cost (per-token, typically $5-30/month depending on usage and model choice). Budget for both if you're using Claude across the full workflow.",[39,1293,1295],{"id":1294},"the-honest-take-where-this-combination-works-best","The honest take: where this combination works best",[14,1297,1298],{},"Claude Code with OpenClaw is at its best for developers who want to move fast on the configuration and customization side.",[14,1300,1301],{},"If you're building a custom agent with specific behavior rules, proprietary skills, and particular model routing preferences, Claude Code cuts the setup time by 80-90%. The time savings are real and significant.",[14,1303,1304],{},"If you're a non-technical founder looking for a shortcut past the entire deployment process, Claude Code helps with configuration but not with infrastructure. The deployment gap remains. You still need hosting, security, and monitoring.",[14,1306,1307],{},"The combination works brilliantly for the development phase. The runtime phase is a separate problem that requires separate tools. Understanding where one ends and the other begins saves you from the most common frustration: expecting Claude Code to be an all-in-one deployment solution when it's an excellent all-in-one configuration solution.",[14,1309,1310,1311,1314],{},"If you want a deployment platform that matches the speed Claude Code brings to configuration, ",[141,1312,1313],{"href":832},"try BetterClaw",". $29/month per agent. The config Claude Code generates drops right in. 60-second deploy. 15+ chat platforms. Docker-sandboxed execution. Your agent is live before Claude Code's session times out.",[39,1316,313],{"id":312},[14,1318,1319],{},[71,1320,1321],{},"What is the Claude Code OpenClaw integration?",[14,1323,1324],{},"Claude Code is Anthropic's coding agent that runs in your terminal. It can generate OpenClaw configuration files, SOUL.md personality definitions, custom skills, model routing configs, and cron job setups from natural language descriptions. It's a development tool that builds your agent's setup. It does not run inside OpenClaw as a model provider or replace the deployment infrastructure.",[14,1326,1327],{},[71,1328,1329],{},"How does Claude Code compare to configuring OpenClaw manually?",[14,1331,1332],{},"Claude Code reduces OpenClaw configuration time from 2-5 hours (manual) to 15-30 minutes. It generates syntactically correct config files, structured SOUL.md files with sections most people forget, and custom skills that follow the correct patterns. Manual configuration requires cross-referencing docs, remembering field names, and debugging typos. Claude Code handles all of that from natural language descriptions.",[14,1334,1335],{},[71,1336,1337],{},"How do I use Claude Code to set up OpenClaw?",[14,1339,1340],{},"Install Claude Code via Anthropic's CLI (requires a Claude Pro or Team subscription). Open your OpenClaw project directory in your terminal. Describe what you want: the model provider, chat platform, agent personality, and any custom skills. Claude Code generates the files directly into your project. Test locally, then deploy to your chosen hosting environment.",[14,1342,1343],{},[71,1344,1345],{},"How much does it cost to use Claude Code with OpenClaw?",[14,1347,1348],{},"Claude Code requires a Claude Pro subscription at $20/month. This is a flat development cost. If you also use Claude (Sonnet, Haiku, Opus) as your OpenClaw model, that's a separate per-token API cost: Sonnet at $3/$15 per million tokens (typically $5-20/month for moderate usage), Haiku at $1/$5 per million tokens ($3-10/month), or Opus at $15/$75 per million tokens ($25-80/month). Budget $20/month for development tools plus $5-30/month for runtime API costs.",[14,1350,1351],{},[71,1352,1353],{},"Can Claude Code handle OpenClaw security configuration?",[14,1355,1356,1357,1359],{},"Claude Code can generate secure config settings (maxIterations limits, authentication parameters, file access restrictions) during the development phase. However, runtime security (Docker sandboxing, encrypted credential storage, anomaly detection, workspace scoping) requires infrastructure-level enforcement that Claude Code cannot provide. Managed platforms like ",[141,1358,774],{"href":783}," handle runtime security automatically. Self-hosting requires you to implement these protections yourself.",{"title":360,"searchDepth":361,"depth":361,"links":1361},[1362,1363,1371,1377,1378,1379,1380],{"id":925,"depth":361,"text":926},{"id":969,"depth":361,"text":970,"children":1364},[1365,1367,1368,1369,1370],{"id":977,"depth":1366,"text":978},3,{"id":1012,"depth":1366,"text":1013},{"id":1034,"depth":1366,"text":1035},{"id":1060,"depth":1366,"text":1061},{"id":1079,"depth":1366,"text":1080},{"id":1120,"depth":361,"text":1121,"children":1372},[1373,1374,1375,1376],{"id":1127,"depth":1366,"text":1128},{"id":1143,"depth":1366,"text":1144},{"id":1171,"depth":1366,"text":1172},{"id":1187,"depth":1366,"text":1188},{"id":1211,"depth":361,"text":1212},{"id":1262,"depth":361,"text":1263},{"id":1294,"depth":361,"text":1295},{"id":312,"depth":361,"text":313},"2026-03-20","Claude Code generates OpenClaw configs in minutes but can't deploy your agent. Here's what the integration does, what it doesn't, and the real workflow.","/img/blog/claude-code-openclaw-guide.jpg",{},"/blog/claude-code-openclaw-guide","13 min read",{"title":891,"description":1382},"Claude Code OpenClaw: Configuration Guide (2026)","blog/claude-code-openclaw-guide",[1391,1392,1393,1394,1395,1396,1397],"Claude Code OpenClaw","Claude Code OpenClaw setup","OpenClaw configuration","Claude Code agent setup","OpenClaw SOUL.md","Claude Code skills","OpenClaw model routing","soVcXLchJvwNh_Q9f0_PZjgTYUVss87D2aiTf6f6IgA",{"id":1400,"title":1401,"author":1402,"body":1403,"category":373,"date":887,"description":1685,"extension":376,"featured":377,"image":1686,"meta":1687,"navigation":380,"path":1688,"readingTime":1689,"seo":1690,"seoTitle":1691,"stem":1692,"tags":1693,"updatedDate":887,"__hash__":1700},"blog/blog/do-you-need-vps-openclaw.md","Do You Need a VPS to Run OpenClaw? (Honest Answer)",{"name":7,"role":8,"avatar":9},{"type":11,"value":1404,"toc":1677},[1405,1410,1413,1416,1419,1422,1425,1429,1432,1438,1444,1447,1458,1464,1470,1474,1477,1482,1488,1491,1494,1499,1504,1515,1521,1525,1528,1533,1543,1546,1551,1556,1559,1565,1569,1572,1575,1578,1581,1584,1590,1597,1599,1604,1607,1612,1615,1620,1623,1628,1631,1636,1639,1643],[14,1406,1407],{},[71,1408,1409],{},"No, you don't need a VPS to run OpenClaw. It runs on your Mac, Windows, or Linux machine. But when your computer sleeps, the agent sleeps too. If you need 24/7 availability, you need either a VPS ($12-24/month + maintenance time) or a managed platform like BetterClaw ($29/month, zero maintenance).",[14,1411,1412],{},"No. But running it on your laptop has a catch that nobody mentions upfront.",[14,1414,1415],{},"Short answer: no, you don't need a VPS to run OpenClaw. You can install it on your Mac, Windows, or Linux machine right now, connect it to Telegram, and start talking to your agent in about 15 minutes.",[14,1417,1418],{},"But here's the catch. When you close your laptop, the agent stops. When your machine goes to sleep, the agent goes to sleep. When you restart for a system update, the agent goes offline. If someone messages your Telegram bot at 2 AM, nobody answers.",[14,1420,1421],{},"That's the real question behind \"do I need a VPS to run OpenClaw.\" It's not about whether OpenClaw can run locally. It can. It's about whether you need an agent that works when you don't.",[14,1423,1424],{},"Here are the three realistic options, what each one actually costs, and which one fits your situation.",[39,1426,1428],{"id":1427},"option-1-run-openclaw-on-your-own-computer","Option 1: Run OpenClaw on your own computer",[14,1430,1431],{},"This is the free option. Install OpenClaw on your Mac, Windows, or Linux machine. Connect it to a chat platform. Start using it.",[14,1433,1434,1437],{},[71,1435,1436],{},"What works well:"," Testing, experimenting, and personal use when you're at your computer. The agent responds instantly. You can watch it work. You can tweak the SOUL.md and see the changes in real time. For learning OpenClaw and figuring out what you want your agent to do, local installation is the right starting point.",[14,1439,1440,1443],{},[71,1441,1442],{},"What doesn't work:"," Anything that requires the agent to be available when you're not at your desk. If you close the laptop, the agent is offline. If your machine goes to sleep (which it will unless you change the power settings), the agent is offline. If you restart for any reason, the agent is offline.",[14,1445,1446],{},"This means no midnight customer support. No morning briefing cron jobs (because the agent was asleep when the cron was supposed to fire). No team members messaging the agent while you're in a meeting. No after-hours sales conversations.",[14,1448,1449,1452,1453,1457],{},[71,1450,1451],{},"Cost:"," $0 for hosting. You still pay for the AI model API ($5-30/month depending on your provider and model choice). For the ",[141,1454,1456],{"href":1455},"/blog/cheapest-openclaw-ai-providers","cheapest model providers for OpenClaw",", our cost guide covers five options under $15/month.",[14,1459,1460,1463],{},[71,1461,1462],{},"Best for:"," Trying OpenClaw before committing to anything. Personal use during work hours. Developers who want to build and test before deploying.",[14,1465,1466],{},[93,1467],{"alt":1468,"src":1469},"OpenClaw local installation showing laptop-based agent that stops when the computer sleeps","/img/blog/do-you-need-vps-local-option.jpg",[39,1471,1473],{"id":1472},"option-2-run-openclaw-on-a-vps","Option 2: Run OpenClaw on a VPS",[14,1475,1476],{},"A VPS (Virtual Private Server) is a server in the cloud that stays on 24/7. You rent it monthly. You install OpenClaw on it. The agent runs around the clock regardless of whether your personal machine is on.",[14,1478,1479,1481],{},[71,1480,1436],{}," Your agent is always available. Cron jobs fire on schedule. Customers get responses at midnight. Team members can message the agent anytime. This is what most production OpenClaw setups use.",[14,1483,1484,1487],{},[71,1485,1486],{},"What it actually involves:"," Renting a VPS from a provider like DigitalOcean, Hetzner, or Contabo. Installing the operating system (usually Ubuntu). Setting up Node.js 22+. Installing Docker. Configuring the firewall. Installing OpenClaw. Setting up your chat platform connections. Configuring security (gateway binding, SSH keys, port restrictions). And then maintaining all of this going forward: applying updates, monitoring for issues, restarting after crashes.",[14,1489,1490],{},"Here's what nobody tells you: the VPS costs $12-24/month. That's the cheap part. The expensive part is your time. The initial setup takes 6-8 hours for a beginner. Ongoing maintenance (updates, monitoring, troubleshooting) adds 2-4 hours per month.",[14,1492,1493],{},"Community reports about DigitalOcean's 1-Click deployment illustrate the point: even the \"easy\" VPS option requires SSH access, manual configuration, and users report fragile Docker setups with a broken self-update mechanism. The VPS is always on. But so are the problems.",[14,1495,1496,1498],{},[71,1497,1451],{}," $12-24/month for the VPS plus $5-30/month for AI model APIs. Total: $17-54/month.",[14,1500,1501,1503],{},[71,1502,1462],{}," Developers comfortable with server administration who want full control. People who enjoy (or at least tolerate) managing infrastructure.",[14,1505,1506,1507,1510,1511,1514],{},"For the ",[141,1508,1509],{"href":1156},"detailed VPS setup walkthrough"," including server sizing, Docker configuration, and the security settings you can't skip, our ",[141,1512,1513],{"href":1156},"self-hosting guide"," covers every step.",[14,1516,1517],{},[93,1518],{"alt":1519,"src":1520},"OpenClaw VPS setup comparison showing costs, setup time, and maintenance requirements","/img/blog/do-you-need-vps-server-option.jpg",[39,1522,1524],{"id":1523},"option-3-use-a-managed-platform","Option 3: Use a managed platform",[14,1526,1527],{},"Managed platforms handle the server, Docker, security, updates, and monitoring for you. You focus on configuring what your agent does (the SOUL.md, the skills, the model choice). They handle where it runs and keeping it running.",[14,1529,1530,1532],{},[71,1531,1436],{}," Everything from the VPS option (24/7 availability, cron jobs, multi-channel support) without the infrastructure management. No terminal. No Docker. No firewall configuration. No server monitoring. Deploy in under 60 seconds.",[14,1534,1535,1538,1539,1542],{},[71,1536,1537],{},"What it costs more:"," Managed platforms charge a premium over raw VPS hosting because they include the operational work. xCloud charges $24/month. ClawHosted charges $49/month (and currently only supports Telegram). ",[141,1540,1541],{"href":832},"BetterClaw charges $29/month per agent",", BYOK with 28+ model providers, and includes Docker-sandboxed execution, AES-256 encryption, and health monitoring with auto-pause.",[14,1544,1545],{},"The real comparison isn't price alone. A $12/month VPS plus 4 hours/month of your time maintaining it has a true cost that depends on what your time is worth. If you bill at $50/hour, that's $200/month in time on top of the $12. If you're a founder with a hundred other things to do, the time cost is even higher.",[14,1547,1548,1550],{},[71,1549,1451],{}," $24-49/month for the platform plus $5-30/month for AI model APIs (BYOK). Total: $29-79/month.",[14,1552,1553,1555],{},[71,1554,1462],{}," Non-technical founders who want an agent without learning server administration. Solopreneurs who value their time over $15-20/month in hosting savings. Anyone who tried the VPS route and decided life is too short for Docker troubleshooting.",[14,1557,1558],{},"The question isn't \"do I need a VPS to run OpenClaw.\" The question is \"do I need my agent running when I'm not at my computer.\" If yes, your options are VPS or managed. If no, run it locally.",[14,1560,1561],{},[93,1562],{"alt":1563,"src":1564},"BetterClaw managed deployment showing 60-second setup vs VPS self-hosting complexity","/img/blog/do-you-need-vps-managed-option.jpg",[39,1566,1568],{"id":1567},"the-path-most-people-actually-take","The path most people actually take",[14,1570,1571],{},"Here's the pattern we see. Most people start locally. They install OpenClaw on their Mac. They connect Telegram. They play with it for a few days. They get excited.",[14,1573,1574],{},"Then they realize the agent only works when they're at their desk. They want the morning briefing at 7 AM. They want customers answered at midnight. They want cron jobs that actually fire on schedule.",[14,1576,1577],{},"Some move to a VPS. They spend a weekend setting it up. Some love the control. Some hit Docker issues, security concerns, and the ongoing maintenance tax, and decide it's not worth it.",[14,1579,1580],{},"Some skip the VPS entirely and go to a managed platform. No regrets about the time they didn't spend configuring firewalls.",[14,1582,1583],{},"There's no wrong path. But knowing where you'll probably end up saves you the intermediate frustration.",[14,1585,272,1586,1589],{},[141,1587,1588],{"href":778},"managed vs self-hosted comparison"," covers the full feature and cost breakdown if you want the detailed version.",[14,1591,1592,1593,1596],{},"If you already know you don't want to manage a server and just want your agent running, ",[141,1594,299],{"href":296,"rel":1595},[298],". $29/month per agent, BYOK with 28+ providers. 60-second deploy. 15+ chat platforms. Docker-sandboxed execution. Your agent runs 24/7 while you do literally anything else.",[39,1598,313],{"id":312},[14,1600,1601],{},[71,1602,1603],{},"Do I need a VPS to run OpenClaw?",[14,1605,1606],{},"No. OpenClaw runs on your Mac, Windows, or Linux machine with no VPS required. The limitation: when your computer is off, asleep, or restarted, the agent stops. If you only need the agent during your work hours, local installation is fine. If you need 24/7 availability (customer support, scheduled tasks, team access), you need either a VPS or a managed platform.",[14,1608,1609],{},[71,1610,1611],{},"What's the cheapest way to run OpenClaw?",[14,1613,1614],{},"Running locally on your own computer is free (you only pay for AI model APIs at $5-30/month). The cheapest always-on option is a basic VPS from Hetzner or Contabo at $5-12/month plus API costs. The cheapest managed option is BetterClaw at $29/month plus API costs (BYOK). The \"cheapest\" option changes when you factor in your time: a VPS requires 6-8 hours to set up and 2-4 hours/month to maintain.",[14,1616,1617],{},[71,1618,1619],{},"How long does it take to set up OpenClaw on a VPS?",[14,1621,1622],{},"For a developer comfortable with Linux, Docker, and server administration: 2-4 hours. For a beginner: 6-8 hours including troubleshooting. This covers VPS provisioning, OS setup, Docker installation, firewall configuration, OpenClaw installation, chat platform connections, and basic security hardening. Ongoing maintenance adds 2-4 hours per month. By comparison, managed platforms deploy in under 60 seconds with zero terminal access.",[14,1624,1625],{},[71,1626,1627],{},"How much does a VPS cost to run OpenClaw?",[14,1629,1630],{},"A VPS with enough resources for OpenClaw (minimum 2GB RAM, recommended 4GB) costs $12-24/month on most providers. Add $5-30/month in AI model API costs (depending on your model and usage). Total self-hosted cost: $17-54/month. Managed platforms like BetterClaw cost $29/month per agent plus the same API costs. The VPS is cheaper on paper but requires ongoing time investment that managed platforms eliminate.",[14,1632,1633],{},[71,1634,1635],{},"Can I run OpenClaw on my Mac without any server?",[14,1637,1638],{},"Yes. OpenClaw installs directly on macOS (and Windows and Linux). Connect it to Telegram or any other supported platform and use it as a personal AI assistant. The agent works whenever your Mac is on and awake. For personal productivity during work hours, this is perfectly fine. For anything that needs to run while you sleep (automated tasks, team access, customer-facing bots), you'll eventually want a server or managed platform.",[39,1640,1642],{"id":1641},"related-reading","Related Reading",[1644,1645,1646,1653,1659,1665,1671],"ul",{},[1647,1648,1649,1652],"li",{},[141,1650,1651],{"href":1156},"OpenClaw VPS Setup: The Real Cost of $8/Month Hosting"," — Detailed VPS walkthrough with security hardening",[1647,1654,1655,1658],{},[141,1656,1657],{"href":1455},"Cheapest OpenClaw AI Providers"," — Five API providers under $15/month",[1647,1660,1661,1664],{},[141,1662,1663],{"href":778},"BetterClaw vs Self-Hosted OpenClaw"," — Full feature and cost comparison",[1647,1666,1667,1670],{},[141,1668,1669],{"href":1097},"OpenClaw API Costs: What You'll Actually Pay"," — Complete API cost breakdown by model and usage",[1647,1672,1673,1676],{},[141,1674,1675],{"href":1200},"OpenClaw Security Risks Explained"," — Why security matters for any hosting option",{"title":360,"searchDepth":361,"depth":361,"links":1678},[1679,1680,1681,1682,1683,1684],{"id":1427,"depth":361,"text":1428},{"id":1472,"depth":361,"text":1473},{"id":1523,"depth":361,"text":1524},{"id":1567,"depth":361,"text":1568},{"id":312,"depth":361,"text":313},{"id":1641,"depth":361,"text":1642},"No, OpenClaw runs locally. But your agent stops when your laptop sleeps. Here are the three hosting options and what each actually costs.","/img/blog/do-you-need-vps-openclaw.jpg",{},"/blog/do-you-need-vps-openclaw","10 min read",{"title":1401,"description":1685},"Do You Need a VPS to Run OpenClaw? Honest Answer","blog/do-you-need-vps-openclaw",[1694,1695,1696,1697,1698,1699],"do I need a VPS to run OpenClaw","OpenClaw without VPS","OpenClaw VPS hosting","cheapest VPS OpenClaw","OpenClaw run locally","OpenClaw hosting options","2FsUhulCDVsqcubpvwjun0cZR1sYp1TzwRMUtQ8nhCA",1776682118452]