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Anthropic Tests Removing Claude Code From Its $20 Pro Plan

SAN FRANCISCO: Anthropic briefly removed Claude Code from its $20-per-month Pro plan on April 21, triggering an immediate backlash from developers. The change appeared silently, no announcement, no email, no changelog entry. Developers spotted it on Reddit and Hacker News within hours.

The pricing page and support documentation both reflected the removal. The support page title changed from “Using Claude Code with your Pro or Max plan” to “Using Claude Code with your Max plan.” The implication was direct, Claude Code would move to Max, starting at $100 per month. For developers paying $20 a month, that represented a fivefold price increase overnight.

Anthropic’s Head of Growth Amol Avasare moved quickly to contain the reaction. He posted on X that the change was “a small test on approximately 2% of new prosumer signups” and that existing Pro and Max subscribers were not affected. However, the public pricing page had updated globally, not just for 2% of users. The entire internet saw the removal simultaneously. Avasare later acknowledged the docs and landing page changes were a mistake for a limited test, and Anthropic reverted both.

Then Avasare went further. He explained that when Anthropic launched Max a year ago, Claude Code was not included, Cowork did not exist, and agents running for hours were not yet a reality. Max was built for heavy chat usage. Since then, usage has shifted dramatically. Engagement per subscriber is up sharply. The current plans, he said plainly, were not built for this. Anthropic is now looking at different structures, without confirming what those will look like.

The episode did not go unnoticed by rivals. OpenAI’s head of Codex confirmed publicly that Codex would remain available on both the free and Plus plans. Sam Altman added a trolling reply to Avasare’s post. GitHub recently pulled Claude Opus access from its own $10 Copilot plan and suspended flat-rate signups entirely. The pattern is clear across the industry, agentic AI features are too expensive to sustain at consumer subscription prices, and repricing is coming.

Anurag Shukla

Anurag Shukla is a Senior Journalist with over two decades of experience across television, digital, and print media. He has worked with leading national news organisations and has also served as a Research Officer in the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO), contributing to media research and policy-level content. A former journalism academic, Anurag brings strong editorial depth and a keen understanding of how technology, governance, and society intersect at Tea4Tech.

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