Anthropic has introduced a new subscription offering that bundles Claude Code into Claude for Enterprise, providing businesses with a comprehensive enterprise package and enhancing integration capabilities.
The integration allows businesses to access Anthropic’s command-line coding tool as part of the enterprise package, which was previously only accessible through individual accounts. According to Scott White, Anthropic product lead, this is “the most requested feature from our business team and enterprise customers,” highlighting the demand for this integrated solution.
The move is designed to enable Anthropic to compete more effectively with command-line tools offered by Google and GitHub, both of which launched with enterprise integrations. Claude Code, launched in June, has gained popularity as a command-line programming tool, offering a more agentic approach compared to traditional IDE-based tools.
However, individual users have faced challenges with unexpected usage limits. The new enterprise offering addresses these issues by enabling businesses to implement granular spending controls that can be adjusted for varying levels of usage. This allows companies to better manage their resources and adapt to different usage scenarios.
Anthropic is particularly enthusiastic about the potential for integrations between Claude Code and the Claude.ai chatbot, which can now be managed with greater flexibility within an enterprise environment. Subscribers to the new bundle can develop Claude Code prompts alongside the Claude chatbot or integrate the command-line tool more deeply into internal data sources.
White noted that enterprise integrations involving customer feedback tools were transformative in his work on Claude.ai. He explained that Claude was used to summarize large amounts of feedback from different sources, translating them into tangible product changes. “There’s something magical about blending customer feedback, getting the voice of your customer and then helping to think about solutions that you might be able to prototype and build that address their unique challenges,” White stated. “It’s something that as a product manager was simply not possible for me even a year ago.”




