Anthropic Launches Lower-Cost Claude Sonnet 5

Anthropic released Claude Sonnet 5 on June 30, positioning the model as its most autonomous mid-tier offering to date and a lower-cost alternative to its flagship Opus 4.8 system. The company said the model can plan multi-step tasks, operate tools such as browsers and terminals, and complete agentic work at a level that previously required larger and more expensive models.

The launch follows a broader industry pattern in which foundation model developers are racing to fold autonomous, multi-step reasoning into their mid-priced offerings rather than reserving it for premium tiers. Anthropic said Sonnet 5 narrows the performance gap with Opus 4.8 on agentic coding and computer-use benchmarks and, on at least one internal knowledge-work benchmark, outperforms it.

In its launch announcement, Anthropic described Sonnet 5 as "the most agentic Sonnet model yet" and said early access partners reported the model completing tasks that earlier Sonnet versions would abandon partway through, along with checking its own output without being prompted.

Among those partners was Zapier, whose senior engineer Daniel Shepard said in a statement that a two-part automation task, updating Salesforce account tiers and sending a launch announcement to enterprise contacts, ran to completion without stalling, a result he called a no-brainer for day-to-day automation work.

Lovable co-founder Fabian Hedin also weighed in, saying the model cleanly and consistently rejects unsafe requests, a quality he said matters as much as raw building capability for a platform used by millions of independent developers.

Security researchers offered a cautiously favorable early assessment as well. Jake Williams, faculty at IANS Research, told Cybernews that the release represented a huge win for security teams, citing the model's lower cost and stronger performance relative to earlier Sonnet versions as factors likely to encourage more secure default deployment practices among enterprise users.

Anthropic said it did not deliberately train Sonnet 5 for cybersecurity tasks and that the model has a much lower ability to perform dangerous cyber operations than the company's current Opus models. The model ships with cyber safeguards enabled by default, which Anthropic said are designed to detect and block dangerous cyber usage in real time. The company published a full system card alongside the release detailing additional safety and capability evaluations.

The release also introduces an updated tokenizer, which Anthropic said can increase token counts by roughly 1.0 to 1.35 times depending on content, a change the company said the introductory pricing is designed to offset so that workloads migrating from Sonnet 4.6 cost about the same to run.

For more information, visit the Anthropic site.

About the Author

John K. Waters is the editor in chief of a number of Converge360.com sites, with a focus on high-end development, AI and future tech. He's been writing about cutting-edge technologies and culture of Silicon Valley for more than two decades, and he's written more than a dozen books. He also co-scripted the documentary film Silicon Valley: A 100 Year Renaissance, which aired on PBS.  He can be reached at [email protected].

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