5.1 KiB
Token Optimization Guide
Practical settings and habits to reduce token consumption, extend session quality, and get more work done within daily limits.
See also:
rules/common/performance.mdfor model selection strategy,skills/strategic-compact/for automated compaction suggestions.
Recommended Settings
These are recommended defaults for most users. Power users can tune values further based on their workload — for example, setting MAX_THINKING_TOKENS lower for simple tasks or higher for complex architectural work.
Add to your ~/.claude/settings.json:
{
"model": "sonnet",
"env": {
"MAX_THINKING_TOKENS": "10000",
"CLAUDE_AUTOCOMPACT_PCT_OVERRIDE": "50",
"CLAUDE_CODE_SUBAGENT_MODEL": "haiku"
}
}
What each setting does
| Setting | Default | Recommended | Effect |
|---|---|---|---|
model |
opus | sonnet | Sonnet handles ~80% of coding tasks well. Switch to Opus with /model opus for complex reasoning. ~60% cost reduction. |
MAX_THINKING_TOKENS |
31,999 | 10,000 | Extended thinking reserves up to 31,999 output tokens per request for internal reasoning. Reducing this cuts hidden cost by ~70%. Set to 0 to disable for trivial tasks. |
CLAUDE_AUTOCOMPACT_PCT_OVERRIDE |
95 | 50 | Auto-compaction triggers when context reaches this % of capacity. Default 95% is too late — quality degrades before that. Compacting at 50% keeps sessions healthier. |
CLAUDE_CODE_SUBAGENT_MODEL |
(inherits main) | haiku | Subagents (Task tool) run on this model. Haiku is ~80% cheaper and sufficient for exploration, file reading, and test running. |
Toggling extended thinking
- Alt+T (Windows/Linux) or Option+T (macOS) — toggle on/off
- Ctrl+O — see thinking output (verbose mode)
Model Selection
Use the right model for the task:
| Model | Best for | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Haiku | Subagent exploration, file reading, simple lookups | Lowest |
| Sonnet | Day-to-day coding, reviews, test writing, implementation | Medium |
| Opus | Complex architecture, multi-step reasoning, debugging subtle issues | Highest |
Switch models mid-session:
/model sonnet # default for most work
/model opus # complex reasoning
/model haiku # quick lookups
Context Management
Commands
| Command | When to use |
|---|---|
/clear |
Between unrelated tasks. Stale context wastes tokens on every subsequent message. |
/compact |
At logical task breakpoints (after planning, after debugging, before switching focus). |
/cost |
Check token spending for the current session. |
Strategic compaction
The strategic-compact skill (in skills/strategic-compact/) suggests /compact at logical intervals rather than relying on auto-compaction, which can trigger mid-task. See the skill's README for hook setup instructions.
When to compact:
- After exploration, before implementation
- After completing a milestone
- After debugging, before continuing with new work
- Before a major context shift
When NOT to compact:
- Mid-implementation of related changes
- While debugging an active issue
- During multi-file refactoring
Subagents protect your context
Use subagents (Task tool) for exploration instead of reading many files in your main session. The subagent reads 20 files but only returns a summary — your main context stays clean.
MCP Server Management
Each enabled MCP server adds tool definitions to your context window. The README warns: keep under 10 enabled per project.
Tips:
- Run
/mcpto see active servers and their context cost - Prefer CLI tools when available (
ghinstead of GitHub MCP,awsinstead of AWS MCP) - Use
disabledMcpServersin project config to disable servers per-project - The
memoryMCP server is configured by default but not used by any skill, agent, or hook — consider disabling it
Agent Teams Cost Warning
Agent Teams (experimental) spawns multiple independent context windows. Each teammate consumes tokens separately.
- Only use for tasks where parallelism adds clear value (multi-module work, parallel reviews)
- For simple sequential tasks, subagents (Task tool) are more token-efficient
- Enable with:
CLAUDE_CODE_EXPERIMENTAL_AGENT_TEAMS=1in settings
Future: configure-ecc Integration
The configure-ecc install wizard could offer to set these environment variables during setup, with explanations of the cost tradeoffs. This would help new users optimize from day one rather than discovering these settings after hitting limits.
Quick Reference
# Daily workflow
/model sonnet # Start here
/model opus # Only for complex reasoning
/clear # Between unrelated tasks
/compact # At logical breakpoints
/cost # Check spending
# Environment variables (add to ~/.claude/settings.json "env" block)
MAX_THINKING_TOKENS=10000
CLAUDE_AUTOCOMPACT_PCT_OVERRIDE=50
CLAUDE_CODE_SUBAGENT_MODEL=haiku
CLAUDE_CODE_EXPERIMENTAL_AGENT_TEAMS=1