Template:Infobox software
Claude is a family of large language models (LLMs) developed by Anthropic, an American artificial intelligence safety and research company. Named after Claude Shannon, the founder of information theory, the series is positioned for enterprise and developer use with emphasis on AI safety and alignment, including the use of Constitutional AI for training.[1][2] Claude models are available via Anthropic's own API and through third-party platforms such as Amazon Bedrock (by Amazon Web Services), Vertex AI (by Google Cloud), Microsoft Azure (via Foundry), and GitHub Copilot.[3][4]
Claude was first released in March 2023 and has since iterated through multiple generations, including the Claude 1.x, 2.x, 3.x, and 4.x families. Each generation includes different model tiers optimized for various balances of intelligence, speed, and cost: Haiku (fast and cost-effective), Sonnet (balanced), and Opus (highest intelligence).[5]
Anthropic emphasizes practical performance (coding, long-horizon "agentic" work, and computer use) and guardrails, alongside features such as Artifacts (structured outputs in a live panel), "computer use" (sandboxed OS/browser control), Memory (multi-session recall), Projects (collaborative workspaces), and native developer tooling via Claude Code.[6][1][7]
As of March 2026, the latest models in the Claude family are Claude Opus 4.6 and Claude Sonnet 4.6, both released in February 2026. These models support a 1 million token context window and adaptive extended thinking. Opus 4.6 supports up to 128K output tokens, while Sonnet 4.6 supports up to 64K output tokens.[8][9]
Anthropic was founded in 2021 by former OpenAI executives and researchers as a public-benefit corporation focused on AI safety. The founding team included siblings Dario Amodei (CEO) and Daniela Amodei (President), along with other former senior members of OpenAI who shared a vision for advancing AI research with an emphasis on safety and alignment.[10]
| Date | Funding Round | Amount | Valuation | Lead Investors |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | Initial | $124 million | N/A | Various |
| 2023-2024 | Series C-D | $4 billion | N/A | Amazon |
| November 2024 | Additional | $4 billion | N/A | Amazon |
| March 2025 | Series E | $3.5 billion | $61.5 billion | Lightspeed Venture Partners |
| September 2025 | Series F | $13 billion | $183 billion | ICONIQ, Fidelity, Lightspeed Venture Partners |
| February 2026 | Series G | $30 billion | $380 billion | GIC, Coatue |
Major investors include Amazon ($8 billion total), Google ($2 billion), Menlo Ventures ($750 million), Bessemer Venture Partners, Cisco Investments, D1 Capital Partners, Fidelity Management & Research Company, Goldman Sachs, Blackstone, Founders Fund, and Sequoia Capital. The Series G round, closed on February 12, 2026, was the second-largest private financing round in tech history, behind only OpenAI's $40 billion raise.[11][40]
Anthropic has experienced rapid revenue growth. At the beginning of 2025, run-rate revenue was approximately $1 billion. By August 2025 it had reached $5 billion. By the end of 2025, annualized revenue stood at roughly $9 billion. As of early 2026, estimates place annualized revenue between $14 billion and $19 billion. Claude Code alone generates over $2.5 billion in annualized revenue as of February 2026, having more than doubled since the start of the year. Anthropic serves over 300,000 business customers, which account for approximately 80% of revenue.[41]
| Generation | Model(s) | Public Release Date | Key Features | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Claude 1 | Claude 1.0, Claude Instant | 14 Mar 2023 | Initial release, 100K token context, limited beta | Discontinued |
| Claude 1 | Claude 1.3 | May 2023 | Improved performance and reliability | Discontinued |
| Claude 2 | Claude 2.0 | 11 Jul 2023 | Public availability, PDF upload, 100K tokens | Discontinued |
| Claude 2 | Claude Instant 1.2 | 9 Aug 2023 | Faster, cheaper variant | Discontinued |
| Claude 2 | Claude 2.1 | 21 Nov 2023 | 200K token context, reduced hallucinations | Discontinued |
| Claude 3 | Haiku, Sonnet, Opus | 4 Mar 2024 | Three-tier family, vision capabilities, up to 1M tokens | Deprecated |
| Claude 3.5 | Sonnet 3.5 | 20 Jun 2024 | Artifacts feature, improved benchmarks | Deprecated |
| Claude 3.5 | Sonnet 3.5 v2, Haiku 3.5 | 22 Oct 2024 | Computer use beta, upgraded coding, fast Haiku | Deprecated (Sonnet), Active (Haiku) |
| Claude 3.7 | Sonnet 3.7 | 24 Feb 2025 | Hybrid extended thinking, 128K output tokens (beta) | Active |
| Claude 4 | Sonnet 4, Opus 4 | 22 May 2025 | Extended thinking, agentic features, ASL-3 safety | Active |
| Claude 4 | Opus 4.1 | 5 Aug 2025 | 74.5% on SWE-bench Verified | Active |
| Claude 4.5 | Haiku 4.5 | 15 Oct 2025 | Extended thinking for Haiku, computer use, $1/$5 pricing | Active |
| Claude 4.5 | Sonnet 4.5 | 29 Sep 2025 | 77.2% on SWE-bench, GitHub Copilot integration | Active |
| Claude 4.5 | Opus 4.5 | 24 Nov 2025 | 80.9% on SWE-bench, 67% price cut from Opus 4 | Active |
| Claude 4.6 | Opus 4.6 | 5 Feb 2026 | 1M context window, 128K output, agent teams, 80.8% SWE-bench | Active (latest) |
| Claude 4.6 | Sonnet 4.6 | 17 Feb 2026 | New default free model, 79.6% SWE-bench, adaptive thinking | Active (latest) |
Claude 1 debuted to selected users in early 2023 as Anthropic's first public assistant trained with Constitutional AI. The initial release included both Claude 1.0 and a lighter Claude Instant variant. Claude 1.3 followed in May 2023 with incremental improvements to reliability.[12]
Claude 2 was released on 11 July 2023 with wider availability, larger context windows, and PDF upload support. Claude 2.1 (November 2023) doubled the context window to 200K tokens and reduced hallucination rates.[13]
Claude 3 (March 2024) introduced the three-tier model family (Haiku, Sonnet, Opus) and multimodal capabilities, allowing the model to process images alongside text. Claude 3 Opus was the most capable model in the lineup at launch, while Haiku offered fast, low-cost inference for high-volume tasks.[5]
Claude 3.5 Sonnet (June 2024) introduced the Artifacts interface, a dedicated panel for generated content with live previews. It set new benchmarks for coding performance among frontier models at the time of release.[6]
Claude 3.5 Sonnet v2 and Haiku 3.5 (October 22, 2024) delivered a major upgrade. The updated Sonnet improved its SWE-bench Verified score from 33.4% to 49.0%, surpassing all publicly available models at the time, including reasoning models like OpenAI o1-preview. This release also introduced the computer use capability in public beta, allowing Claude to control a desktop through cursor movement, clicking, and typing. Claude 3.5 Haiku launched alongside it as the fastest model in the lineup, surpassing the previous-generation Claude 3 Opus on many benchmarks while maintaining Haiku-level speed and pricing.[42]
Claude 3.7 Sonnet (February 2025) was the first Claude model with hybrid extended thinking. Users could toggle a reasoning mode on or off, directing the model to think step-by-step internally before responding. It also supported up to 128K output tokens in beta, more than 15x longer than earlier Claude models.[14]
Claude 4 (May 2025) shipped Sonnet 4 and Opus 4 with full extended thinking and was classified as ASL-3 (Anthropic Safety Level 3), reflecting increased model capabilities and corresponding safety requirements. Opus 4 scored 72.5% on SWE-bench Verified and led on Terminal-bench (43.2%). Sonnet 4 scored 72.7% on SWE-bench, a significant upgrade over Sonnet 3.7. Both models could use tools during extended thinking, alternating between reasoning and tool use. Claude Code, Anthropic's agentic coding CLI, reached general availability alongside this release.[1]
Claude Opus 4.1 (August 5, 2025) arrived as a drop-in replacement for Opus 4 with improved multi-file refactoring, more precise bug fixes, and context-aware style adaptation. It raised the SWE-bench Verified score to 74.5% and improved the harmless response rate from 97.27% to 98.76%. GitHub reported stronger performance on complex refactoring tasks, and Rakuten Group noted that the model could pinpoint exact corrections within large codebases without introducing unnecessary changes.[43]
Claude Sonnet 4.5 (September 29, 2025) pushed SWE-bench Verified to 77.2% and OSWorld (computer use) to 61.4%. It shipped alongside Claude Code 2.0, which introduced checkpoints, IDE extensions, parallel agents, and automation hooks. A 1M token context window became available in beta for long sessions and large codebases. GitHub Copilot integration was also announced, with Sonnet 4.5 added as a model option in September 2025.[44]
Claude Haiku 4.5 (October 15, 2025) was Anthropic's first Haiku model with extended thinking, computer use, and context awareness capabilities. It delivered performance comparable to Sonnet 4 (the previous generation's mid-tier flagship) at a price point of $1/$5 per million tokens (input/output), making near-frontier intelligence accessible for high-volume deployments and multi-agent architectures.[45]
Claude Opus 4.5 (November 24, 2025) arrived with a 67% price reduction compared to the previous Opus tier, dropping from $15/$75 to $5/$25 per million tokens (input/output). It achieved 80.9% on SWE-bench Verified, the first model to break the 80% barrier on that benchmark, outperforming OpenAI's GPT-5.1-Codex-Max (77.9%) and Google's Gemini 3 Pro (76.2%). It also used 76% fewer output tokens than its predecessor, signaling that Anthropic was prioritizing both performance and efficiency. The model achieved a 99.78% harmless response rate on single-turn violative requests, the highest of any Claude model at the time.[15]
Claude Opus 4.6 (February 5, 2026) became the first Opus-class model with a native 1 million token context window and 128K output token support at general availability. It introduced agent teams, an experimental Claude Code feature that allows multiple agents to collaborate on tasks with shared context and inter-agent messaging. The model scored 80.8% on SWE-bench Verified and 65.4% on Terminal-Bench 2.0 (the highest score ever recorded on that benchmark). It also achieved the top score on Humanity's Last Exam, a reasoning benchmark, and outperformed GPT-5.2 by approximately 144 Elo points on GDPval-AA, a benchmark for economically valuable work tasks. METR estimated its 50% time-horizon at approximately 14.5 hours on software tasks, meaning the model can successfully complete tasks that would take a skilled human professional nearly 15 hours about half the time. Alongside Opus 4.6, Anthropic introduced context compaction (automatic summarization of older context for longer tasks) and effort controls with four levels (low, medium, high, max) that let users trade off intelligence, speed, and cost. Claude for PowerPoint was also announced as a research preview, and Claude for Excel received Opus 4.6 support.[8][16][51]
Claude Sonnet 4.6 (February 17, 2026) became the new default model for both free and paid users. Internal testing found that developers preferred Sonnet 4.6 over the previous flagship Opus 4.5 59% of the time, citing fewer hallucinations, better instruction following, and less overengineering. In Claude Code, users preferred Sonnet 4.6 over Sonnet 4.5 roughly 70% of the time. It scored 79.6% on SWE-bench Verified, within 1.2 percentage points of Opus 4.6, at one-fifth the cost. Sonnet 4.6 supports a 1M token context window and up to 64K output tokens.[9]
Claude models are generative pre-trained transformers trained on diverse datasets including internet text, contractor-provided data, and opt-in user interactions. The training process involves predicting the next word in large amounts of text, followed by fine-tuning using Reinforcement Learning from Human Feedback (RLHF) and Constitutional AI.[17]
Anthropic's transparency materials state that Claude Opus 4 and Sonnet 4 used a training data cutoff around March 2025 (with a reliable knowledge cutoff of January 2025) and document development infrastructure using PyTorch, JAX, and Triton on major cloud providers.[18]
Constitutional AI is Anthropic's core innovation for training AI systems to be helpful, harmless, and honest. The method involves two primary phases:
Supervised Learning Phase:
The model generates responses to prompts
It self-critiques and revises responses based on constitutional principles
The model is fine-tuned on these revised responses
Reinforcement Learning Phase:
Uses Reinforcement Learning from AI Feedback (RLAIF)
An AI generates comparisons of responses based on constitutional compliance
This data trains a preference model
Claude is fine-tuned to align with this preference model
The constitution includes 75 principles drawn from sources including:
United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights
Platform guidelines from technology companies
Principles designed to discourage sycophantic or evasive behavior
Custom principles developed by Anthropic researchers[12][17]
| Model Generation | Default Context | Maximum Context | Max Output Tokens |
|---|---|---|---|
| Claude 2.x | 100,000 tokens | 200,000 tokens (Claude 2.1) | ~4,096 tokens |
| Claude 3.x | 200,000 tokens | 1 million tokens (specific use cases) | ~4,096 tokens |
| Claude 3.5 Sonnet v2 | 200,000 tokens | 200,000 tokens | 8,192 tokens |
| Claude 3.7 Sonnet | 200,000 tokens | 200,000 tokens | 128,000 tokens (beta) |
| Claude 4.x (pre-4.6) | 200,000 tokens | 1 million tokens (with beta header) | 64,000-128,000 tokens |
| Claude 4.6 Opus | 200,000 tokens | 1 million tokens (generally available) | 128,000 tokens |
| Claude 4.6 Sonnet | 200,000 tokens | 1 million tokens (generally available) | 64,000 tokens |
The 1M context window became generally available with Opus 4.6 and Sonnet 4.6 at standard pricing, with no per-token multiplier for larger requests. On the 8-needle 1M variant of MRCR v2, a needle-in-a-haystack retrieval benchmark, Opus 4.6 scored 76% compared to Sonnet 4.5's 18.5%.[8][19]
Context windows affect the amount of text Claude can process in a single conversation, with larger windows enabling analysis of full books, extensive codebases, and lengthy documents. The evolution from 100K tokens in 2023 to 1M tokens in 2026 represents a tenfold increase in the amount of information Claude can work with in a single session.
Introduced with Claude 3.7 Sonnet in February 2025, extended thinking allows Claude to reason step-by-step internally before producing a final answer. The feature works as a toggle: users can activate it when deeper reasoning is needed for math, physics, coding, or multi-step analysis.
Claude 4 (May 2025) brought full extended thinking to the Opus tier and added the ability for models to use tools during thinking, allowing Claude to alternate between reasoning and external tool calls within a single response.
Starting with Claude 4.6, Anthropic introduced adaptive thinking as the recommended mode. In this mode, Claude dynamically decides when and how much to think based on the complexity of the input. At the default effort level ("high"), Claude almost always engages in some degree of internal reasoning.[14][8]
| Capability | Description | Availability |
|---|---|---|
| Text generation | Writing, analysis, summarization, translation | All models |
| Vision | Image understanding and analysis | Claude 3 onward |
| Code generation | Programming in multiple languages | All models |
| Tool use | Function calling for external integrations | API only |
| Computer use | Direct computer control (mouse, keyboard, screen navigation) | Claude 3.5 Sonnet v2 onward; Mac desktop from March 2026 |
| Extended thinking | Step-by-step internal reasoning before answering | Claude 3.7 Sonnet onward |
| Agent teams | Multi-agent orchestration with shared context | Claude 4.6 (experimental) |
| MCP integration | Connecting to external tools and data via Model Context Protocol | Claude Code and API |
| Inline visualizations | Interactive charts, diagrams, and visuals rendered in conversation | All plans (beta, March 2026) |
On November 25, 2024, Anthropic introduced the Model Context Protocol (MCP), an open standard for connecting AI assistants to external data systems such as content repositories, business management tools, and development environments.[46]
MCP addressed the combinatorial challenge of connecting multiple AI models with multiple tools and data sources. Before MCP, connecting ten AI applications to 100 tools could require up to 1,000 custom integrations. MCP reduces this to a standard interface: implement the client protocol once and the server protocol once, and they work together automatically.
The protocol provides three core primitives: tools (model-controlled actions), resources (application-controlled data), and prompts (user-controlled templates). SDKs are available for Python, TypeScript, C#, and Java, with over 97 million monthly SDK downloads across Python and TypeScript as of early 2026.
Adoption has been rapid. OpenAI, Google DeepMind, and Microsoft have all adopted MCP, and the community has built thousands of MCP servers. In December 2025, Anthropic donated MCP to the Agentic AI Foundation (AAIF), a directed fund under the Linux Foundation, co-founded by Anthropic, Block, and OpenAI.[47]
Claude Code uses MCP extensively. Through MCP servers, Claude Code can read design documents in Google Drive, update tickets in Jira, pull data from Slack, or connect to custom internal tooling. The Claude.ai platform also includes a directory with over 75 built-in connectors powered by MCP.[48]
First introduced in August 2025 for Pro and Enterprise users, Memory allows Claude to recall information across multiple conversations, remember personal preferences and context, update and forget information on request, and maintain continuity over extended periods.[20]
In March 2026, Anthropic expanded Memory to all plans, including the free tier. The update also introduced a memory import tool, allowing users to bring in saved conversations and memories from other AI providers. Chat Memory now processes conversations roughly every 24 hours, distilling long-term-worthy information into a stored profile that loads automatically into future conversations. Chat Search, a RAG-based feature for searching past conversations, remains limited to paid plans.[21]
Launched June 2024, Projects provides:
Collaborative workspaces for teams
Document and resource management
Shared context across multiple chats
Custom instructions per project[22]
Debuted with Claude 3.5 Sonnet:
Dedicated panel for generated content
Live previews of code, documents, and visualizations
Iterative refinement capabilities
Direct export and sharing[23]
On March 12, 2026, Anthropic launched interactive visualizations in Claude as a beta feature. Claude can now generate charts, diagrams, flowcharts, timelines, and interactive widgets directly inside a conversation.[52]
These inline visuals are distinct from Artifacts. While Artifacts appear in a separate side panel and persist as shareable documents, inline visualizations are embedded within the conversation flow and are temporary; they change or disappear as the conversation evolves. Their purpose is to aid understanding of the topic being discussed, not to create permanent outputs.[52]
Technically, Claude generates JavaScript (using Chart.js), HTML, CSS, and SVG on the fly to render the visuals. Because they use HTML and SVG rather than generated images, they load faster and support hover and click interactions. Users can request visuals directly (for example, "draw this as a diagram") or Claude will generate them automatically when it determines that a visual would convey an answer more effectively than plain text.[52]
The feature is available to all Claude users, including those on the free plan.[52]
First released in public beta with Claude 3.5 Sonnet v2 (October 2024), computer use allows Claude to:
Control mouse and keyboard inputs
Navigate web browsers
Interact with desktop applications
Execute multi-step computer tasks
Available in sandboxed environments
Early adopters included Asana, Canva, Cognition, DoorDash, Replit, and The Browser Company. Computer use performance improved significantly across model generations, with Claude Sonnet 4.5 scoring 61.4% on OSWorld, a benchmark for computer use tasks. Claude for Chrome, a browser automation tool, became available to Max users with Opus 4.5.[24][44]
On March 23, 2026, Anthropic announced that Claude can now directly control a Mac computer through the Claude Desktop app. When a user enables the feature and describes a task in natural language, Claude opens apps, navigates browsers, fills in spreadsheets, moves the mouse, types on the keyboard, and completes multi-step tasks autonomously. The system first checks whether it has a native integration (such as a Google Workspace or Slack connector) for the requested task; if no connector is available, it falls back to screen-based control, navigating the computer the way a human would.[53]
Safety is built around a permission-first model. Claude requests access before interacting with a new application, and users can halt operations at any point. Anthropic also implemented automatic scanning to detect prompt injection attempts. The company recommends that users avoid using the feature to handle sensitive information during this early stage.[53]
Computer use on Mac is available to Claude Pro and Max subscribers as a research preview. To use it, users must update the Claude Desktop app to the latest version, switch to Cowork or Code mode, grant folder access by selecting the directory they want Claude to use, and then describe their task. Windows and Linux support is not yet available.[53]
Claude Code is Anthropic's AI-powered command-line tool for agentic coding. First introduced as a limited research preview in February 2025, it reached general availability in May 2025 alongside the Claude 4 launch.[7]
The tool operates directly in the terminal or within IDE integrations (Visual Studio Code and JetBrains). It reads codebases, edits files, runs commands, handles git workflows, and can submit pull requests through natural language instructions. As of February 2026, Claude Code accounts for roughly 4% of public GitHub commits, approximately 135,000 per day. The product generates over $2.5 billion in annualized revenue, having grown more than 10x in three months during mid-2025.[25][41]
Key features include:
Codebase mapping and search: automatically indexes project structure and dependencies
Multi-step task execution with checkpoints and rollback
Support for background tasks via GitHub Actions
MCP (Model Context Protocol) server integration for external tools and databases
Subagent support: up to 10 concurrent subagents for parallelized coding tasks
Agent teams (experimental, Opus 4.6): multiple agents collaborating with inter-agent messaging
Powered by Sonnet 4.6 by default, with Opus 4.6 available for more complex work
As of January 2026, included with every standard Team plan seat at no extra cost[7][25]
Claude Code 2.0, released alongside Sonnet 4.5 in September 2025, introduced checkpoints for safer iteration, an IDE extension for Visual Studio Code and JetBrains, parallel agents for running multiple coding tasks simultaneously, and automation hooks for integrating into CI/CD pipelines.[44]
Claude Cowork is Anthropic's agentic desktop product designed to bring the capabilities of Claude Code to knowledge workers across all professional domains, not just software engineering. First released as a research preview for macOS in late January 2026, Cowork gives Claude access to a user-selected folder on the local computer and allows it to read, edit, and create files autonomously to complete delegated tasks.[54]
In Cowork mode, users describe a task in natural language. Claude then makes a plan, executes it step by step, and loops the user in on progress. The product shipped for macOS on January 16, 2026 (Pro subscribers) and expanded to Team and Enterprise plans on January 23. A Windows version followed in February 2026.[54]
Starting in February 2026, organizations can connect Claude Cowork to existing tools such as Google Drive, Gmail, DocuSign, and FactSet through enterprise connectors, and can deploy customizable plugins across domains like financial analysis, engineering, and human resources. Following the launches of Claude Cowork for Mac and Windows, enterprise software stocks shed a combined $285 billion in value as investors repriced companies whose core functionality overlapped with what Anthropic's desktop AI could automate.[54][55]
In March 2026, Anthropic expanded Cowork with a Projects feature, allowing users to attach local folders and organize files, instructions, and task context inside a single workspace. This enables context reusability across sessions rather than isolated one-off tasks.[56]
Microsoft also adopted the Cowork technology for its own products. On March 9, 2026, Microsoft announced Copilot Cowork, a new agent in Microsoft 365 Copilot that uses Claude's technology to automate multi-step workflows across Outlook, Teams, Excel, and other Microsoft 365 applications. Copilot Cowork requires a separate $30-per-user-per-month license and is available through a new Microsoft 365 E7 bundle priced at $99 per user monthly. The feature entered a limited research preview in March 2026 with broader availability planned for late March.[57]
Anthropic launched Dispatch on March 17, 2026 as a research preview within Claude Cowork. Dispatch creates a persistent conversation thread that syncs between the Claude mobile app (iOS and Android) and the desktop app, enabling a "phone-to-desktop" workflow. Users can send instructions from their phone (for example, "Organize my Q1 tax receipts on my Mac" or "Export the pitch deck and attach it to the meeting invitation at 2 p.m.") and Claude executes the task on the desktop application in its sandboxed environment.[58]
The bridge between phone and desktop is end-to-end encrypted. Even when controlled remotely, Claude pauses and sends a push notification to the user's phone before performing potentially destructive actions such as deleting files or moving large directories. The agent can only access the specific folders or applications the user has explicitly shared with the Cowork app.[58]
Dispatch rolled out first to Max plan users on March 17, with Pro plan access following the next day. Anthropic has indicated that a broader rollout to free users is planned for later in 2026.[58]
Introduced October 16, 2025, Claude Skills (also called Agent Skills) are modular capabilities that extend Claude's functionality through:
Packaged workflows containing instructions, scripts, and resources
Progressive disclosure mechanism for efficient context management
Automatic loading when relevant to tasks
Support for both Anthropic-provided skills (document processing) and custom user-created skills
Available across Claude apps, Claude Code, and the API
Claude Skills enable users to create reusable, specialized behaviors for common tasks without repetitive prompting. Skills operate in Claude's sandboxed code execution environment and can include executable scripts for deterministic operations. Enterprise organizations like Rakuten, Box, and Notion have implemented Skills to streamline workflows and maintain consistency across AI-generated outputs.[26][27]
Launched March 2025, providing:
Real-time information retrieval
Initially available to paying US users
Integration with current events and updated information
Claude integrates with Microsoft 365, allowing users to connect with SharePoint, OneDrive, Outlook, and Teams to access and analyze documents, emails, and meeting summaries. Claude for Excel and Claude for PowerPoint add-ins share a single conversation thread through Shared Context, enabling continuity across applications. These integrations are available to Max, Team, and Enterprise users.[49]
Claude for Excel is a Microsoft 365 add-in that embeds Claude directly inside Excel spreadsheets. Users can switch between Sonnet 4.6 and Opus 4.6 as the underlying model, with Opus 4.6 recommended for complex financial models and multi-tab analysis.[59]
In early 2026, Anthropic significantly expanded Claude for Excel with native spreadsheet editing tools. The update added support for pivot table editing (sorting, filtering, and modifying schemas of existing pivot tables), conditional formatting, and other operations that bring it closer to a full Excel editing experience. The tool also gained MCP connector support, letting Claude pull data from external financial platforms such as S&P Global, LSEG, Daloopa, PitchBook, Moody's, and FactSet without leaving Excel.[59]
Claude for Excel is available on Pro, Max, Team, and Enterprise plans.[59]
Claude for PowerPoint was released as a research preview on February 5, 2026, alongside the Opus 4.6 launch. The add-in embeds Claude inside PowerPoint, where it generates new slides, edits existing ones, and builds complete presentation structures from natural-language prompts.[60]
A distinguishing feature is template compliance: Claude reads the open presentation's slide master, layouts, fonts, and color scheme before generating or editing content, so that new slides follow the same branding and formatting constraints as the rest of the deck. Claude can also convert bullet points into editable native PowerPoint visuals such as diagrams, process flows, and charts (not static images). Users can choose between Sonnet 4.5 and Opus 4.6 as the underlying model.[60]
Claude for PowerPoint is currently available to Max ($100/month), Team, and Enterprise plan subscribers. It is not yet included in the Pro plan.[60]
On March 6, 2026, Anthropic launched Claude Marketplace, a curated enterprise platform where businesses can purchase third-party software tools built on Claude's models. Enterprise customers with committed annual spending on Anthropic's API and services can apply a portion of that spend toward Marketplace purchases, and Anthropic does not take a commission on the transactions.[61]
The Marketplace launched in limited preview with six partners:
| Partner | Domain |
|---|---|
| GitLab | Software development lifecycle |
| Harvey | Legal AI workflows |
| Lovable | No-code app development |
| Replit | Developer platform |
| Rogo | Financial analysis |
| Snowflake | Enterprise data operations |
Anthropic and Snowflake also announced a $200 million multi-year partnership in early 2026, giving Claude access to Snowflake's 12,600 global customers. Anthropic plans to bring additional third-party products to the Marketplace over time. Enterprises interested in early access must contact their Anthropic account team.[61]
Claude models are regularly evaluated on standardized benchmarks. The table below summarizes key results for recent models.
| Benchmark | Sonnet 4.5 | Opus 4.5 | Opus 4.6 | Sonnet 4.6 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SWE-bench Verified | 77.2% | 80.9% | 80.8% | 79.6% |
| Terminal-Bench 2.0 | N/A | N/A | 65.4% | N/A |
| METR 50% time-horizon | N/A | ~4 hours | ~14.5 hours | N/A |
| MRCR v2 (8-needle, 1M) | 18.5% | N/A | 76% | N/A |
The following table shows the progression of SWE-bench Verified scores across the Claude 4.x family:
| Model | SWE-bench Verified | Release Date |
|---|---|---|
| Claude Opus 4 | 72.5% | May 2025 |
| Claude Sonnet 4 | 72.7% | May 2025 |
| Claude Opus 4.1 | 74.5% | August 2025 |
| Claude Sonnet 4.5 | 77.2% | September 2025 |
| Claude Opus 4.5 | 80.9% | November 2025 |
| Claude Sonnet 4.6 | 79.6% | February 2026 |
| Claude Opus 4.6 | 80.8% | February 2026 |
METR, a nonprofit focused on evaluating AI capabilities, estimated that Opus 4.6 has a 50% time-horizon of approximately 14.5 hours (95% confidence interval: 6 to 98 hours) on software tasks. This means Opus 4.6 can successfully complete tasks that would take a skilled human professional about 14.5 hours roughly half the time. METR noted that their task suite is nearly saturated at this level, making measurement increasingly noisy. The fitted trend line from METR data shows AI task-completion capability approximately doubling every 123 days since 2023.[16]
On SWE-bench Verified, Opus 4.5's 80.9% score outperformed OpenAI's GPT-5.1-Codex-Max (77.9%) and Google's Gemini 3 Pro (76.2%) at the time of its release. Opus 4.6 achieved the highest score ever recorded on Terminal-Bench 2.0 (65.4%), a leading evaluation for agentic coding systems, and leads on BrowseComp, a benchmark for information retrieval.[15][51]
| Platform | Scope | Key Dates / Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Anthropic (claude.ai; iOS/Android; API) | Direct chat; developer API; Claude Code | Ongoing; Sonnet 4.6 default from 17 Feb 2026 |
| Amazon Bedrock | Managed access to Claude family for AWS customers | All current models available |
| Vertex AI (Model Garden) | Managed access on Google Cloud | Claude 3 models and later variants available |
| Microsoft Azure (Foundry) | Managed access on Azure | Opus 4.5 onward available |
| GitHub Copilot | AI coding assistant integration | Sonnet 4.5 added September 2025; Opus 4.6 added February 2026 |
| Microsoft 365 (Excel, PowerPoint) | Office add-ins with Shared Context | Max, Team, and Enterprise users |
| Microsoft 365 Copilot (Copilot Cowork) | Agentic task automation across M365 apps | Research preview, March 2026; E7 bundle |
| Claude Marketplace | Third-party enterprise software store | Limited preview, March 6, 2026 |
| Plan | Features | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Free | Access to Sonnet 4.6, Memory, basic features, inline visualizations | $0 |
| Pro | Higher rate limits, priority access, Chat Search, Cowork, Claude for Excel, computer use (Mac) | $20/month |
| Max 5x | 5x Pro usage limits, priority new model access, Claude for PowerPoint | $100/month |
| Max 20x | 20x Pro usage limits, priority new model access, Claude for PowerPoint | $200/month |
| Team (Standard seat) | Collaboration features, shared workspaces, Projects, Claude Code included | $25/user/month (annual) |
| Team (Premium seat) | All Standard features plus Claude Code and early access to new collaboration features | $150/user/month (monthly); $100/user/month (annual) |
| Enterprise | Advanced features, dedicated support, custom deployment, Compliance API | Custom pricing |
The Max plan was launched in April 2025 for power users and professionals who need significantly higher usage limits. It was Anthropic's direct answer to OpenAI's $200-per-month ChatGPT Pro tier.[28]
Team and Enterprise plans received Claude Code inclusion at no additional cost starting January 2026. Admins can assign standard or premium seats based on individual needs, with premium seats providing access to both Claude and Claude Code. Enterprise customers also gained a Compliance API for real-time programmatic access to Claude usage data, enabling continuous monitoring and automated policy enforcement.[50]
API Pricing (per million tokens, as of March 2026):
| Model | Input | Output | Batch (50% discount) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Claude Haiku 4.5 | $1 | $5 | $0.50 / $2.50 |
| Claude Sonnet 4.6 | $3 | $15 | $1.50 / $7.50 |
| Claude Opus 4.6 | $5 | $25 | $2.50 / $12.50 |
For Sonnet 4.6 requests exceeding 200K input tokens, long-context pricing of $6/$22.50 applies. Opus 4.6 also offers a fast mode at $30/$150 for latency-sensitive workloads. Prompt caching is available across all models, with cache writes at 1.25x the input price and cache reads at 0.1x the input price.[29]
Claude competes primarily with OpenAI's GPT-4 and GPT-5 series and Google's Gemini family. The second half of 2025 saw intense competition: Claude Sonnet 4.5 shipped September 29, OpenAI released GPT-5.1 on November 12, and Google launched Gemini 3 on November 18.[30]
As of early 2026, the competitive picture is mixed. Claude models lead on SWE-bench Verified (coding tasks), while GPT-5.2 outperforms on ARC-AGI-2 (abstract reasoning) and Gemini 3 Deep Think holds the top score on Humanity's Last Exam (broad knowledge). On pricing, Anthropic's Opus 4.6 at $5/$25 per million tokens sits between Gemini 3.1 Pro ($2/$12) and OpenAI's GPT-5.2 ($1.75/$14).[30]
ChatGPT maintains the largest user base with around 800 million weekly active users, though its market share has declined from over 87% to roughly 68% as Claude and Gemini have closed capability gaps.[30]
In the developer tools space, Claude Code competes with GitHub Copilot, Cursor, and other AI-powered coding assistants. Claude Code's 4% share of public GitHub commits as of early 2026 has made it a significant player in the AI-assisted software development market.[25]
Anthropic classifies its models using an internal Anthropic Safety Level (ASL) scale. Claude 4 models are classified as ASL-3, indicating they are powerful enough to pose "significantly higher risk" and require enhanced safety measures.[31]
Safety measures include:
Extensive red teaming exercises to identify vulnerabilities
Bias mitigation through Constitutional AI
External evaluations by independent researchers
Collaboration with organizations like Thorn for child safety
Reduced susceptibility to prompt injection and jailbreaking attempts
Harmless response rates tracked across model versions: 97.27% for Opus 4, 98.76% for Opus 4.1, and 99.78% for Opus 4.5[32][43][15]
Claude has received praise for:
Leading performance on coding benchmarks (80.9% on SWE-bench Verified for Opus 4.5; 80.8% for Opus 4.6)
Large context window capabilities enabling processing of entire books and codebases
Natural, human-like writing style
Strong safety and alignment measures
Practical utility in enterprise settings
Sonnet 4.6 delivering near-Opus performance at a fraction of the cost
Rapid price reductions (67% cut for Opus between generations 4 and 4.5)
Claude Cowork's desktop automation capabilities for non-technical knowledge workers
Enterprise adoption has grown significantly, with a 5.5x revenue increase reported in August 2025 and over 300,000 business customers by late 2025. Reviews highlight Claude's coding strengths, and Sonnet 4.6 has been described as matching flagship-level performance for the majority of professional workloads.[33]
Some users have noted that Claude's strong ethical alignment can reduce usability, with the model refusing to assist with benign requests that it misinterprets as harmful. For example, the system administration question "How can I kill all python processes in my Ubuntu server?" has been refused due to the word "kill."[34]
Anthropic's web crawler, ClaudeBot, has faced criticism for:
Allegedly ignoring robots.txt protocols
Causing excessive server loads during data collection
Aggressive crawling behavior affecting website performance[35]
On October 18, 2023, Anthropic was sued by Concord, Universal, ABKCO, and other music publishers for alleged systematic and widespread infringement of copyrighted song lyrics.[36]
The Claude mobile app saw tepid reception compared to ChatGPT's launch, with slower adoption rates despite comparable functionality.[37]
In October 2025, Anthropic updated its policy so that chats from personal (non-enterprise) users are used to improve models by default, with an opt-out offered in account settings. Key points:
Retention extended to five years
Enterprise, government, and education accounts excluded from training use
Users can opt out through account settings
No training on user data without permission for enterprise accounts[38]
Constitutional AI, articulated in a 2022 paper, has influenced Claude's training and alignment approach and is cited by Anthropic as a scalable method that reduces reliance on large volumes of human-labeled "harms" data. The approach represents a significant departure from traditional RLHF methods used by competitors.[17]
Anthropic's research has contributed to the field of AI safety through:
Development of Constitutional AI methodology
Research on AI interpretability and mechanistic understanding
Work on scalable oversight and alignment techniques
Publications on red teaming and safety evaluation methods
Creation and open-sourcing of the Model Context Protocol (MCP)[39][46]
Generative artificial intelligence
Constitutional AI
AI safety
Claude Shannon