Artificial Intelligence AI Tools & News

Anthropic confirms Claude Code subscribers will incur additional fees for utilizing the OpenClaw tool integration

Claude Code subscribers will soon face increased costs when integrating Anthropic’s coding assistant with OpenClaw and other third-party applications.

A customer email surfacing on Hacker News reveals that as of noon Pacific today, April 4, Anthropic has discontinued the use of Claude subscription limits for third-party tools like OpenClaw. Moving forward, subscribers must utilize a separate pay-as-you-go billing model for any usage involving these external harnesses.

Anthropic clarified that while OpenClaw is the first to be affected today, this new policy encompasses all third-party harnesses and will be expanded to include others in the near future.

Boris Cherny, Anthropic’s head of Claude Code, explained on X that their existing subscription models were not designed for the heavy usage demands of third-party tools. He emphasized that these changes are part of a deliberate effort to manage growth and ensure the company can serve its customers sustainably in the long run.

The announcement comes after OpenClaw creator Peter Steinberger said he was joining Anthropic rival OpenAI, with OpenClaw continuing as an open source project with support from OpenAI.

Steinberger noted that despite efforts by himself and board member Dave Morin to negotiate with Anthropic, they were only successful in postponing the price hike by a single week. He further critiqued the timing of the decision, suggesting that Anthropic first integrated popular OpenClaw features into their own proprietary system before restricted access for open-source projects.

Cherny, however, maintained that the Claude Code team are strong supporters of open source. He noted that he personally submitted several pull requests to specifically enhance the prompt cache efficiency for OpenClaw.

He explained that the decision was primarily driven by engineering constraints, noting that Anthropic is providing full refunds to affected subscribers. He clarified that the move is an effort to be explicit about the features they do not officially support, acknowledging that some users may have been unaware of these limitations.

At the same time, OpenAI has reportedly discontinued its Sora app and video generation models. This move is aimed at freeing up computational power as part of a strategic shift to capture the market of software engineers and enterprises that are currently favoring products like Claude Code.

Related Articles

Back to top button

Please disable adblocker

We do it for free, please support us by allowing this website in adblocker exception