LangGraph is used to build stateful, reliable, and complex multi-agent applications, offering benefits like persistence, human-in-the-loop oversight, and controllable, iterative workflows. Key use cases include advanced AI agents, research bots, complex chatbots, and coding assistants. Synonyms for its use cases include agentic workflows, stateful orchestration, graph-based AI, and multi-agent systems.
- Multi-Agent Systems: Creating complex workflows where specialized agents collaborate, such as a researcher agent and a writer agent.
- Human-in-the-loop Workflows: Allowing agents to pause, request human approval, or take feedback before proceeding with actions.
- Complex Research and Summarization: Developing AI research assistants that can browse the web, extract data, and generate reports.
- Customer Support Agents: Building conversational agents that hold context over long interactions and use tools to solve user problems.
- Code Generation and Refinement: Enabling iterative coding workflows where an LLM writes code, tests it, and iterates on errors.
- Router Workflows: Directing tasks through specific paths in a graph, allowing for high adaptability and conditional logic.
- Data Extraction Pipelines: Using structured graph nodes for tasks like text cleaning, data extraction, and processing.
- Long-Running Agents: Maintaining state over extended periods, useful for complex, multi-turn tasks that persist over time.
- Research Assistant: A bot that uses a to search the web, evaluate sources, and generate a final report.
- Customer Support Chatbot: Using and to maintain user context over long conversations.
- Autonomous Agent: Systems that plan, act, and observe, repeating the cycle to solve complex problems.
- Data Analysis Agents: Agents that read data, generate insights, and update a shared state.
- Uber, Klarna, J.P. Morgan, and Cisco use LangGraph to build robust AI agents.
- GitLab, Replit, and Qodo leverage it for complex coding tasks.
- State Management: Tracks the state of the conversation and workflow.
- Persistence: Resumes operations from a specific point.
- Streaming: Provides real-time visibility into the agent's thought process.