Anthropic lands $30B Series G, valuation hits $380B

Anthropic confirms $30B raise at $380B valuation

Anthropic said it has closed a $30 billion Series G funding round, valuing the enterprise AI company at a $380 billion post-money valuation. The announcement follows recent market reports suggesting the company was seeking capital at a valuation near $350 billion.

Who led the round

The financing was led by GIC and Coatue, with D. E. Shaw Ventures, Dragoneer, Founders Fund, ICONIQ, and MGX named as co-leads. The wider investor group includes Accel, Bessemer Venture Partners, BlackRock affiliates, Blackstone, Fidelity, General Catalyst, Greenoaks, Insight Partners, Sequoia Capital, Temasek, and TPG, among others. The round also includes a portion of previously announced investments from Microsoft and NVIDIA.

Where the money goes

Anthropic said the new capital will be used to accelerate frontier research, deepen product development, and expand infrastructure—areas central to its push to be the default AI layer for enterprise and coding use cases.

The company highlighted the reach of Claude across major cloud marketplaces, describing it as the only frontier model broadly available on Amazon Web Services (Bedrock), Google Cloud (Vertex AI), and Microsoft Azure (Foundry). Training and deployment span AWS Trainium, Google TPUs, and NVIDIA GPUs, a setup the firm says supports workload optimization and operational resilience.

Enterprise traction and “agentic” work

Anthropic reported a $14 billion revenue run rate less than three years after generating its first revenue, claiming annual growth of more than 10x in each of the past three years. It also said customers spending more than $100,000 annually on Claude rose sevenfold over the past year, while more than 500 customers now exceed $1 million in annual spend. The company added that eight of the Fortune 10 rely on Claude.

On developer tooling, Claude Code—released publicly in May 2025—has surpassed a $2.5 billion run rate, according to the company, and is increasingly used beyond software development for finance, cybersecurity, sales, and scientific workflows. The firm also pointed to its newest model, Opus 4.6, as a step toward agents that can manage broader categories of real-world tasks.

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