Nearly 80% of Claude’s consumer usage now comes from overseas markets, with per-person activity in South Korea, Australia and Singapore surpassing that of the US, the company said.
Anthropic, valued at $183 billion and backed by Alphabet and Amazon, has built a reputation for AI systems that perform strongly at coding.
Its Claude large language models are regarded as among the most powerful frontier models available, helping the company grow its enterprise customer base from fewer than 1,000 to over 300,000 in two years.
The company’s run-rate revenue rose to more than $5 billion by August, up from about $1 billion at the start of the year.
To meet demand, Anthropic plans to add over 100 roles in Dublin, London and Zurich, while opening its first Asian office in Tokyo alongside new European sites.
The expansion is being led by Chris Ciauri, recently appointed managing director of International, following Paul Smith’s move to chief commercial officer.
“The global demand for Claude is extraordinary—from financial services in London to manufacturing in Tokyo, enterprises are trusting Claude to power their mission-critical operations,” Ciauri said.
Earlier this week, Microsoft signed a deal to integrate Claude into its Copilot assistant, marking a shift for the tool that has until now relied mainly on OpenAI.