(Corrects headline to say “its”, not “it”)
By Max A. Cherney and Deepa Seetharaman
SAN FRANCISCO, April 9 (Reuters) – Artificial intelligence lab Anthropic is exploring โthe possibility of designing its own chips, three sources said, as โthe company and its rivals respond to a shortage of AI chips needed to power โand develop more advanced AI systems.
The plans are in early stages and the company may still decide to only buy AI chips and not design any, according to two people with knowledge of the matter and one โperson briefed on Anthropic’s plans. โ The company has yet to commit to a specific design or put together a dedicated team to work on โ the project, one of the sources said.
A spokesperson for the San Francisco-based company declined to comment on the article.
Demand for its AI model Claude has accelerated โin โ2026, with the startup’s run-rate revenue now โsurpassing $30 billion, up from about $9 โbillion at the end of 2025, Anthropic said earlier this week.
Anthropic uses a range of chips, including tensor processing units (TPUs) designed by Alphabet’s Google and Amazon’s chips to develop and run its AI software and chatbot Claude.
Earlier this week, Anthropic signed a long-term deal with Google and Broadcom, which โhelps design the TPUs. That deal builds โon the company’s commitment to invest $50 billion โin strengthening U.S. computing infrastructure.
Anthropic’s โdiscussions mirror similar efforts underway at large tech companies โthat are seeking to design their โown AI chips, including โMeta and OpenAI.
Designing an advanced AI chip can cost roughly half a billion dollars, according to industry sources, as companies need to โemploy skilled engineers and โspend to make sure the manufacturing process has no defects.
(Reporting โby Max A. Cherney and Deepa Seetharaman in San Francisco; Editing โby Sayantani Ghosh and Aurora Ellis)