Anthropic’s Initiative to Provide Claude Chatbot to U.S. Government On August 12, 2025, Anthropic announced it will offer its Claude chatbot to U.S. federal agencies and lawmakers for a nominal fee of $1 per agency or official. This initiative aims to promote the adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) within all three branches of the U.S. […]
On August 12, 2025, Anthropic announced it will offer its Claude chatbot to U.S. federal agencies and lawmakers for a nominal fee of $1 per agency or official. This initiative aims to promote the adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) within all three branches of the U.S. government: executive, legislative, and judicial.
The Claude chatbot is approved for sensitive but unclassified work. The agreements with government entities are valid for one year and are intended to provide AI companies with valuable insights into government use cases, which could inform future enterprise offerings.
This move follows a similar initiative by OpenAI, which has also offered its AI tools to government agencies. Additionally, Google is negotiating a comparable deal to provide its Gemini chatbot to the U.S. government. These efforts reflect a broader push by AI companies to establish a foothold within governmental operations amid growing political and regulatory scrutiny.
Federal officials have emphasized that these agreements do not indicate a preference for any single AI provider. While the deals are currently approved, vendors may still face future reviews, especially concerning potential ideological biases in AI systems.
Despite significant operational losses, companies like Anthropic and OpenAI continue to attract high valuations and investor interest. OpenAI is reportedly pursuing a $500 billion valuation, while Anthropic is targeting $170 billion. The collaboration with the government also highlights the intensifying competition among leading AI firms to become the preferred provider for governmental AI solutions.
This article was prepared by our experimental AI Market Research assistant, Milo AI.
John O'Connor is the founder and principal engineer of Web Lifter, a Brisbane software studio building custom software, AI systems, and structured data for Australian SMBs. He has spent over eight years shipping production AI and backend systems, and writes about what actually holds up once the demos are over. Everything published here is drawn from systems running in production for real clients.