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Home/CyberSecurity News/Anthropic Stops Claude Subscriptions for Third-Party Tools
CyberSecurity News

Anthropic Stops Claude Subscriptions for Third-Party Tools

Key Takeaways Anthropic has ceased allowing Claude Pro and Max subscriptions to power third-party AI automation tools. The change, effective April 4, 2026, initially impacts OpenClaw users, with a...

Jennifer sherman
Jennifer sherman
April 4, 2026 4 Min Read
32 0

Key Takeaways

  • Anthropic has ceased allowing Claude Pro and Max subscriptions to power third-party AI automation tools.
  • The change, effective April 4, 2026, initially impacts OpenClaw users, with a broader rollout planned.
  • Users can now integrate third-party tools via pay-as-you-go “extra usage” bundles or standard Claude API keys, incurring additional costs.
  • The move aims to alleviate “outsized strain” on Anthropic’s infrastructure and prioritize core product users.
  • The decision has sparked significant user backlash due to increased operational costs for autonomous AI agent workflows.

Anthropic Restricts Claude Subscription Access for Third-Party AI Agents

Anthropic has implemented a significant policy change, discontinuing the use of Claude Pro and Max subscriptions to power third-party artificial intelligence agent tools. This move fundamentally alters how subscribers can leverage Anthropic’s advanced AI models outside its proprietary ecosystem.

Table Of Content

  • Key Takeaways
  • Anthropic Restricts Claude Subscription Access for Third-Party AI Agents
  • Enforcement Begins with OpenClaw
  • Infrastructure Strain Cited as Primary Driver
  • New Usage Options and User Backlash
  • What You Should Do

Enforcement Begins with OpenClaw

According to Boris Cherny, an executive for Anthropic Claude Code, as of April 4, 2026, at 12 p.m. PT (8 p.m. BST), Claude Pro and Max subscribers can no longer utilize their existing subscription allowances to fuel third-party automation platforms. The initial enforcement target is OpenClaw, a widely adopted open-source AI agent framework known for facilitating tasks such as email management, web browsing, and smart home automation. Cherny indicated via a social media post that this restriction would extend to all third-party harnesses in the coming weeks.

Starting tomorrow at 12pm PT, Claude subscriptions will no longer cover usage on third-party tools like OpenClaw.

You can still use these tools with your Claude login via extra usage bundles (now available at a discount), or with a Claude API key.

— Boris Cherny (@bcherny) April 3, 2026

While Anthropic’s Consumer Terms of Service have technically prohibited unauthorized third-party tool access since at least February 2024, enforcement of this clause had been notably lenient. Many OpenClaw users had exploited an OAuth authentication loophole, mirroring the login method used by Claude Code, to integrate subscription-tier Claude models into their personal agents at a fixed monthly cost. Anthropic formally updated its terms in February 2026 to explicitly close this gap, reserving OAuth authentication exclusively for Claude Code and Claude.ai.

Infrastructure Strain Cited as Primary Driver

The company stated in a notification email that the crackdown was partly necessitated by the “outsized strain” third-party harnesses were placing on its infrastructure. Anthropic emphasized the need to prioritize capacity for customers utilizing its core products.

Peter Steinberger, a prominent figure associated with OpenClaw, commented on the situation, stating that he and OpenClaw board member Dave Morin “tried to talk sense into Anthropic, best we managed was delaying this for a week.”

woke up and my mentions are full of these

Both me and @davemorin tried to talk sense into Anthropic, best we managed was delaying this for a week.

Funny how timings match up, first they copy some popular features into their closed harness, then they lock out open source. https://t.co/Mgmv6YmW2B

— Peter Steinberger 🦞 (@steipete) April 3, 2026

New Usage Options and User Backlash

Subscribers wishing to continue integrating third-party agents with their Claude account now have two primary alternatives: enabling pay-as-you-go “extra usage” billing, which is charged separately from their subscription, or authenticating through a standard Claude API key with metered API pricing. To mitigate the financial impact, Anthropic is offering a one-time credit equivalent to a user’s monthly subscription cost, redeemable by April 17, along with discounts of up to 30% on pre-purchased extra usage bundles. A full subscription refund option is also available for those who do not wish to continue under the revised terms.

The policy shift has triggered considerable pushback from the developer and power-user communities. Many users who relied on OpenClaw-plus-Claude workflows report that per-interaction costs now range from $0.50 to $2.00 per agent task, rendering autonomous agent use cases economically unfeasible for hobbyists and solo developers. Critics contend that Anthropic promoted agentic workflows while simultaneously restricting the most affordable methods for their development. This policy change highlights a growing industry tension between AI companies focused on infrastructure monetization and developer communities advocating for open, flat-rate access to advanced AI models.

What You Should Do

  • If you currently use a Claude Pro or Max subscription to power third-party AI agents, review your workflows immediately.
  • Evaluate the new pricing models: pay-as-you-go “extra usage” bundles or standard Claude API keys, to determine the financial impact on your operations.
  • Consider utilizing Anthropic’s offered one-time credit and discounts on extra usage bundles, or opt for a full subscription refund if the new terms are not viable.
  • Explore alternative AI models or platforms if the revised cost structure for Claude makes your current autonomous agent use cases economically unfeasible.

Disclaimer: HackersRadar reports on cybersecurity threats and incidents for informational and awareness purposes only. We do not engage in hacking activities, data exfiltration, or the hosting or distribution of stolen or leaked information. All content is based on publicly available sources.

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Jennifer sherman

Jennifer sherman

Jennifer is a cybersecurity news reporter covering data breaches, ransomware campaigns, and dark web markets. With a background in incident response, Jennifer provides unique insights into how organizations respond to cyber attacks and the evolving tactics of threat actors. Her reporting has covered major breaches affecting millions of users and has helped organizations understand emerging threats. Jennifer combines technical knowledge with investigative journalism to deliver in-depth coverage of cybersecurity incidents.

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