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Sunday, June 21, 2026
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Anthropic Hits $965 Billion Valuation with Landmark $65B Series H Raise

written by Sam Davies · 3 weeks ago · 0 comments

Anthropic, the safety-focused artificial intelligence company behind the Claude family of models, has completed one of the largest fundraising rounds in tech history — a $65 billion Series H that pushes its post-money valuation to a staggering $965 billion. The announcement positions Anthropic firmly ahead of rival OpenAI as the most valuable private AI company on the planet.

The fundraising milestone arrives at a pivotal moment for the San Francisco-based startup, which has been ramping up competition with its large language models across enterprise, coding, and reasoning benchmarks. Investors backing the round are betting heavily that Anthropic’s emphasis on AI safety and interpretability research will prove to be a long-term differentiator as the industry matures.

The raise is seen as a springboard toward a potential initial public offering that Anthropic has been quietly preparing for later in the year. With its valuation now approaching the $1 trillion mark, any IPO would rank among the most significant technology listings in recent memory.

Anthropic’s rapid ascent reflects a broader surge in AI investment globally, with enterprises and governments alike pouring unprecedented resources into building and deploying advanced AI systems. The company’s flagship Claude models have gained traction across industries ranging from legal research to software development.

The company has not disclosed specific investors for this round, though previous backers include Google, Amazon, and a host of venture capital firms. If the valuation holds through an IPO, Anthropic would join an exclusive group of technology companies worth nearly a trillion dollars.


Sam Davies

Sam Davies is a journalist who covers technology, books, IT, and business. His reporting breaks down complex topics into clear, practical stories that readers can act on. Over the years, he has written about emerging software, hardware launches, publishing trends, and the companies shaping each sector. He focuses on the questions readers actually ask, whether that means explaining a new IT system, reviewing a recent release, or tracking how a business grows. His work blends technical detail with plain language, making him a trusted voice for anyone who wants to understand where technology and commerce are headed.

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