See what teams are actually building with this month. Each tile is one open source AI model on Hugging Face. Bigger tile means more downloads. Green means the model is gaining users, red means it is losing them.
An AI model treemap is a chart where each rectangle stands for one open-source model and the rectangle area is sized by a metric (here: monthly downloads on Hugging Face). The bigger the tile, the more downloads. Treemaps work well for the open-source AI ecosystem because a few flagship models dwarf the long tail, and a treemap keeps that scale difference visible at a glance.
This treemap pulls the live monthly-download count from the public Hugging Face API for every tracked open-source model and assigns the tile color from the download trend (up, flat, down) since the previous refresh. Use the modality filter to switch between text, image, video, audio, and embedding models. Click any tile to open that model’s full profile on Made By Agents, with hardware requirements and Q4 VRAM estimates.
The chart is embeddable on any website with a single iframe — copy the snippet from the share button at the top of the page. Your readers get a live view of the open-source AI ecosystem and you keep them on your own domain.

Browse Beyond Downloads
The treemap shows what is popular. The model rankings show what is actually best at a task — every open and closed model we track, ranked by composite benchmark score and matched to your hardware.
Per-benchmark score gap between open-source and closed-source models, across every text benchmark.

Per-token input and output prices for 350+ hosted models, refreshed hourly from OpenRouter.

Detect your hardware and find out which of these models you can actually run locally.

Plain-language deep dives on every benchmark used to score these models.
An AI model treemap is a chart where each rectangle stands for one AI model, sized by a number like monthly downloads. The bigger the tile, the higher the value. Treemaps work well for open source AI adoption because a few leaders dwarf the long tail, and a treemap keeps that scale difference visible in one view.
Download counts come from the public Hugging Face API and refresh on a recurring schedule. Trends compare the latest refresh to the previous one, so what you see is the most recent picture of open source AI activity available.
Yes. Click the share button at the top of the page and copy the iframe snippet. The embedded version updates automatically as new data comes in, so it stays fresh on your site without any maintenance from you.
No. Closed models like GPT-5, Claude, or Gemini do not publish download counts. The treemap is open source only and draws from the Hugging Face Hub, the central registry for open weights AI models.
Text, image, video, audio, and embedding models. The filter bar at the top of the page switches between them. The All view groups the layout by category so you can compare the relative scale of each at a glance.