AWS made Claude Platform on AWS generally available, giving customers access to Anthropic’s native Claude platform through existing AWS accounts.

AWS described the launch as the first cloud-provider access to the native Claude Platform experience, including Anthropic APIs, console access and early-access beta features without separate accounts, billing or tracking.

The service aims to reduce the account, billing and audit split created when teams use Anthropic’s native platform outside their AWS environment.

Claude Platform on AWS will allow customers use existing AWS Identity and Access Management credentials and access controls, consolidated AWS billing and CloudTrail audit logging while accessing Anthropic’s first-party platform.

Native developer tools and beta features

The native platform includes Claude Managed Agents in beta, advisor strategy in beta, web search, web fetch, code execution, the Files API in beta, Skills in beta, the MCP connector in beta, prompt caching, citations, batch processing and the Claude Console for prompt development and evaluation.

AWS listed availability across multiple North American, South American, European and Asia Pacific regions, including US East, US West, Tokyo, Seoul, Sydney, London, Frankfurt and Paris.

Operational visibility and infrastructure scale

AWS detailed that CloudTrail captures requests to Claude Platform on AWS from the Anthropic SDK, Claude Code or Cowork, with workspace operations logged as management events by default and optional data event logging for inference activity. Usage is billed through AWS Marketplace and can be monitored in AWS Cost Explorer, with resource tags available for spending allocation.

The launch follows a deeper infrastructure agreement between Anthropic and Amazon. In April, Anthropic disclosed a commitment of more than $100 billion over ten years to AWS technologies, securing up to 5 GW of new capacity to train and run Claude across Graviton and Trainium2 through Trainium4 chips.

Anthropic also said more than 100,000 customers run Claude on Amazon Bedrock and that it currently uses more than 1 million Trainium2 chips to train and serve Claude.

Amazon’s own announcement added that it would invest $5 billion in Anthropic immediately and up to $20 billion more in the future, on top of the $8 billion it had previously invested. Amazon also said the expanded agreement includes international inference capacity in Asia and Europe, linking the AWS account integration to Anthropic’s broader capacity plans.

Contextualizing the enterprise shift toward agents

The product also lands as enterprises continue to move from AI pilots into more formal deployment programs. McKinsey’s 2025 global AI survey found that 88% of respondents reported regular AI use in at least one business function, but only about one-third said their companies had begun scaling AI programs across the enterprise.

The same survey found that 23% were scaling agentic AI somewhere in the enterprise and another 39% had begun experimenting with agents.

Personalized Feed
Personalized Feed