Anthropic, one of the worldโs largest AI vendors, has a powerful family of generative AI models called Claude. These models can perform a range of tasks, from captioning images and writing emails to solving math and coding challenges.
With Anthropicโs model ecosystem growing so quickly, it can be tough to keep track of which Claude models do what. To help, weโve put together a guide to Claude, which weโll keep updated as new models and upgrades arrive.
Claude models
Claude models are named after literary works of art: Haiku, Sonnet, and Opus. The latest are:
- Claude 3.5 Haiku, a lightweight model.
- Claude 3.7 Sonnet, a midrange, hybrid reasoning model. This is currently Anthropicโs flagship AI model.
- Claude 3 Opus, a large model.
Counterintuitively, Claude 3 Opus โ the largest and most expensive model Anthropic offers โ is the least capable Claude model at the moment. However, thatโs sure to change when Anthropic releases an updated version of Opus.
Most recently, Anthropic released Claude 3.7 Sonnet, its most advanced model to date. This AI model is different from Claude 3.5 Haiku and Claude 3 Opus because itโs a hybrid AI reasoning model, which can give both real-time answers and more considered, โthought-outโ answers to questions.
When using Claude 3.7 Sonnet, users can choose whether to turn on the AI modelโs reasoning abilities, which prompt the model to โthinkโ for a short or long period of time.
When reasoning is turned on, Claude 3.7 Sonnet will spend anywhere from a few seconds to a couple minutes in a โthinkingโ phase before answering. During this phase, the AI model is breaking down the userโs prompt into smaller parts and checking its answers.
Claude 3.7 Sonnet is Anthropicโs first AI model that can โreason,โ a techniqueย many AI labs have turned to as traditional methods of improving AI performance taper off.
Even with its reasoning disabled, Claude 3.7 Sonnet remains one of the tech industryโs top-performing AI models.
In November, Anthropic released an improved โ and more expensive โ version of its lightweight AI model, Claude 3.5 Haiku. This model outperforms Anthropicโs Claude 3 Opus on several benchmarks, but it canโt analyze images like Claude 3 Opus or Claude 3.7 Sonnet can.
All Claude models โ which have a standard 200,000-token context window โ can also follow multistep instructions, use tools (e.g., stock ticker trackers), and produce structured output in formats likeย JSON.
A context window is the amount of data a model like Claude can analyze before generating new data, while tokens are subdivided bits of raw data (like the syllables โfan,โ โtas,โ and โticโ in the word โfantasticโ). Two hundred thousand tokens is equivalent to about 150,000 words, or a 600-page novel.
Unlike many major generative AI models, Anthropicโs canโt access the internet, meaning theyโre not particularly great at answering current events questions. They also canโt generate images โ only simple line diagrams.
As for the major differences between Claude models, Claude 3.7 Sonnet is faster than Claude 3 Opus and better understands nuanced and complex instructions. Haiku struggles with sophisticated prompts, but itโs the swiftest of the three models.
Claude model pricing
The Claude models are available through Anthropicโs API and managed platforms such as Amazon Bedrock and Google Cloudโs Vertex AI.
Hereโs the Anthropic API pricing:
- Claude 3.5 Haiku costs 80 cents per million input tokens (~750,000 words), or $4 per million output tokens
- Claude 3.7 Sonnet costs $3 per million input tokens, or $15 per million output tokens
- Claude 3 Opus costs $15 per million input tokens, or $75 per million output tokens
Anthropic offers prompt caching and batching to yield additional runtime savings.
Prompt caching lets developers store specific โprompt contextsโ that can be reused across API calls to a model, while batching processes asynchronous groups of low-priority (and subsequently cheaper) model inference requests.
Claude plans and apps
For individual users and companies looking to simply interact with the Claude models via apps for the web, Android, and iOS, Anthropic offers a free Claude plan with rate limits and other usage restrictions.
Upgrading to one of the companyโs subscriptions removes those limits and unlocks new functionality. The current plans are:
Claude Pro, which costs $20 per month, comes with 5x higher rate limits, priority access, and previews of upcoming features.
Being business-focused, Team โ which costs $30 per user per month โ adds a dashboard to control billing and user management and integrations with data repos such as codebases and customer relationship management platforms (e.g., Salesforce). A toggle enables or disables citations to verify AI-generated claims. (Like all models, Claude hallucinates from time to time.)
Both Pro and Team subscribers get Projects, a feature that grounds Claudeโs outputs in knowledge bases, which can be style guides, interview transcripts, and so on. These customers, along with free-tier users, can also tap into Artifacts, a workspace where users can edit and add to content like code, apps, website designs, and other docs generated by Claude.
For customers who need even more, thereโs Claude Enterprise, which allows companies to upload proprietary data into Claude so that Claude can analyze the info and answer questions about it. Claude Enterprise also comes with a larger context window (500,000 tokens), GitHub integration for engineering teams to sync their GitHub repositories with Claude, and Projects and Artifacts.
A word of caution
As is the case with all generative AI models, there are risks associated with using Claude.
The models occasionallyย make mistakes when summarizingย or answering questions because of theirย tendency toย hallucinate. Theyโre also trained on public web data, some of which may be copyrighted or under a restrictive license. Anthropic and many other AI vendors argue that theย fair-useย doctrine shields them from copyright claims. But that hasnโt stopped data owners fromย filing lawsuits.
Anthropicย offers policiesย to protect certain customers from courtroom battles arising from fair-use challenges. However, they donโt resolve the ethical quandary of using models trained on data without permission.
This article was originally published on October 19, 2024. It was updated on February 25, 2025 to include new details about Claude 3.7 Sonnet and Claude 3.5 Haiku.


