Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei believes todayโs AI models hallucinate, or make things up and present them as if theyโre true, at a lower rate than humans do, he said during a press briefing at Anthropicโs first developer event, Code with Claude, in San Francisco on Thursday.
Amodei said all this in the midst of a larger point he was making: that AI hallucinations are not a limitation on Anthropicโs path to AGI โ AI systems with human-level intelligence or better.
โIt really depends how you measure it, but I suspect that AI models probably hallucinate less than humans, but they hallucinate in more surprising ways,โ Amodei said, responding to TechCrunchโs question.
Anthropicโs CEO is one of the most bullish leaders in the industry on the prospect of AI models achieving AGI. In a widely circulated paper he wrote last year, Amodei said he believed AGI could arrive as soon as 2026. During Thursdayโs press briefing, the Anthropic CEO said he was seeing steady progress to that end, noting that โthe water is rising everywhere.โ
โEveryoneโs always looking for these hard blocks on what [AI] can do,โ said Amodei. โTheyโre nowhere to be seen. Thereโs no such thing.โ
Other AI leaders believe hallucination presents a large obstacle to achieving AGI. Earlier this week, Google DeepMind CEO Demis Hassabis said todayโs AI models have too many โholes,โ and get too many obvious questions wrong. For example, earlier this month, a lawyer representing Anthropic was forced to apologize in court after they used Claude to create citations in a court filing, and the AI chatbot hallucinated and got names and titles wrong.
Itโs difficult to verify Amodeiโs claim, largely because most hallucination benchmarks pit AI models against each other; they donโt compare models to humans. Certain techniques seem to be helping lower hallucination rates, such as giving AI models access to web search. Separately, some AI models, such as OpenAIโs GPT-4.5, have notably lower hallucination rates on benchmarks compared to early generations of systems.
However, thereโs also evidence to suggest hallucinations are actually getting worse in advanced reasoning AI models. OpenAIโs o3 and o4-mini models have higher hallucination rates than OpenAIโs previous-gen reasoning models, and the company doesnโt really understand why.
Later in the press briefing, Amodei pointed out that TV broadcasters, politicians, and humans in all types of professions make mistakes all the time. The fact that AI makes mistakes too is not a knock on its intelligence, according to Amodei. However, Anthropicโs CEO acknowledged the confidence with which AI models present untrue things as facts might be a problem.
In fact, Anthropic has done a fair amount of research on the tendency for AI models to deceive humans, a problem that seemed especially prevalent in the companyโs recently launched Claude Opus 4. Apollo Research, a safety institute given early access to test the AI model, found that an early version of Claude Opus 4 exhibited a high tendency to scheme against humans and deceive them. Apollo went as far as to suggest Anthropic shouldnโt have released that early model. Anthropic said it came up with some mitigations that appeared to address the issues Apollo raised.
Amodeiโs comments suggest that Anthropic may consider an AI model to be AGI, or equal to human-level intelligence, even if it still hallucinates. An AI that hallucinates may fall short of AGI by many peopleโs definition, though.


