
Anthropic has begun rolling out localized pricing for its Claude AI assistant in India, the company’s largest market outside the United States. The move signals a broader push by global AI firms to adapt their offerings for the world’s most populous nation.
Indian users are now seeing rupee-denominated rates on Claude’s website and mobile applications. However, Anthropic has not yet integrated support for the Unified Payments Interface (UPI), India’s widely adopted instant payment system. Subscribers must still use credit or debit cards, or pay through Apple’s and Google’s app store billing. This contrasts with OpenAI, which added Indian rupee pricing for ChatGPT back in August 2025 and included UPI as a payment option from the start.
Pricing breakdown and market significance
<
p>For Indian users, Anthropic lists Claude Pro at ₹2,000 per month when billed annually, which equates to roughly $21. That compares to $17 per month in the United States. Claude Max starts at ₹11,999 per month (around $125) in India, versus $100 in the U.S. Team plans begin at ₹2,399 per seat per month (about $25), compared to $20 in the U.S. All Indian prices include local taxes. Mobile app prices vary slightly from those shown on the website.
India accounts for 5.8 percent of global Claude usage, making it the service’s second-largest country by adoption after the United States, according to data Anthropic has shared. Longtime users in India had been requesting rupee pricing to avoid the friction of dollar-denominated subscriptions and currency conversion fees.
Growing footprint in India
Anthropic has been steadily deepening its presence in the country. It opened a Bengaluru office in February 2026, following an announcement in October 2025. In January, the company appointed Irina Ghose, a former managing director at Microsoft India, to lead its business operations there. Recently, Anthropic also struck partnerships with Indian IT services giants Infosys and Tata Consultancy Services to scale enterprise AI deployments.
But the expansion hit a bump in June when Anthropic abruptly restricted access to its Fable 5 and Mythos 5 models for non-U.S. entities. That move prompted some Indian developers and startup founders to explore alternatives to American AI models. Access to Fable 5 has since been restored, though Mythos 5 remains limited for users outside the U.S.
India has become a critical market for AI companies, driven by its huge pool of developers and tech workers. Yet turning widespread usage into paid subscriptions remains tough in a price-sensitive environment. Anthropic’s localized pricing is a clear attempt to improve conversion rates. For more on how AI is reshaping diagnostics and patient care globally, see our coverage of AI in healthcare.







