The latest ranking reflects a dramatic growth trajectory for Anthropic in the enterprise segment.
Data from Ramp shows that roughly 9% of businesses in its dataset were paying for Anthropic tools in May 2025, compared with 34.4% in April 2026, meaning adoption roughly quadrupled in a year.
Several milestones along that path include:
Ramp’s economist noted that Anthropic had already been strong among high‑adoption sectors such as finance, tech, and professional services, and the latest data suggests that advantage expanded into other industries.
The available evidence points to several structural factors behind the change—although the data does not attribute the shift to any single product feature.
First, the Ramp index focuses on paid enterprise subscriptions, which often reflect procurement decisions made by IT or finance departments rather than individual user preference.
Second, enterprise adoption is particularly important because business customers typically represent a more durable revenue stream than consumer usage, making the metric closely watched by investors.
Finally, Ramp’s analysis indicates the growth is not necessarily driven by companies abandoning OpenAI entirely. In some cases, organizations appear to be adding Anthropic alongside existing AI tools, suggesting a growing multi‑vendor strategy rather than a complete platform switch.
Anthropic’s enterprise growth has been accompanied by massive investor backing.
In February 2026, the company raised $30 billion in a Series G funding round, valuing the company at $380 billion—one of the largest private technology financings ever.
Since then, multiple reports have said Anthropic is considering an even larger raise. Sources cited by Bloomberg and TechCrunch indicate the company has received pre‑emptive offers to raise roughly $50 billion at valuations between $850 billion and $900 billion, though the discussions are still preliminary.
If such a round closed at those terms, it would rank among the largest private financings in technology history and could set the stage for a potential public offering reportedly being considered as early as late 2026.
Despite the symbolic crossover, several factors suggest the enterprise AI race remains highly competitive.
1. The margin is extremely small.
Anthropic leads by just 2.1 percentage points in the latest index, meaning modest shifts in spending could quickly reverse the ranking.
2. The dataset reflects a specific business sample.
Ramp’s index is built from transactions among companies using its financial platform, so it may not represent the entire global enterprise market.
3. Many companies are adopting multiple AI providers.
Ramp’s analysis suggests growth for Anthropic may partly come from companies adding a second vendor rather than abandoning existing ones, which keeps competition intense.
Anthropic’s lead in the Ramp AI Index does not guarantee long‑term dominance. But it does mark a meaningful milestone: the first clear sign that enterprise AI adoption is no longer centered on a single default provider.
For the broader AI ecosystem, the message is clear. Enterprise buyers are rapidly expanding their AI spending—and the competition to become the default workplace model platform is still wide open.
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