Tech
Anthropic launches Claude Marketplace, giving enterprises access to Claude-powered tools from Replit, GitLab, Harvey and more
San Francisco startup Anthropic continues to ship new AI products and services at a blistering pace, despite a messy ongoing dispute with the U.S. Department of War.
Today, the company announced Claude Marketplace, a new offering that lets enterprises with an existing Anthropic spend commitment apply part of it toward tools and applications powered by Anthropic’s Claude models but made and offered by external partners including GitLab, Harvey, Lovable, Replit, Rogo and Snowflake.
According to Anthropic’s Claude Marketplace FAQ, the program is designed to simplify procurement and consolidate AI spend. Anthropic says the Marketplace is now in limited preview and that enterprises interested in using it should reach out to their Anthropic account team to get started.
For customers interested in the Marketplace, Anthropic says purchases made through it “count against a portion of your existing Anthropic commitment,” and that the company will manage invoicing for partner spend — meaning enterprises can use part of their existing Anthropic commitment to buy Claude-powered partner solutions without separately handling partner invoicing.
In effect, Anthropic is positioning Claude Marketplace as a more centralized way for enterprises to procure certain Claude-powered partner tools.
Yet, the whole point of Anthropic’s Claude Code and Claude Cowork applications for many users was that they could shift enterprise spend and time away from current third-party software-as-a-service (Saas) apps and instead, they could “vibe code” new solutions or bespoke, AI-powered workflows. This idea is so pervasive that prior Claude integrations have on several recent occasions caused a major selloff in SaaS stocks after investors thought Claude could threaten the underlying companies and applications.
Claude Marketplace seems to be pushing against that idea, suggesting current SaaS apps are still valuable and perhaps even more useful and appealing to enterprises with Claude integrated into them.
The launch raises a broader question about how enterprises will choose to use Claude: directly through Anthropic’s own products and APIs, or through third-party applications that embed Claude for more specialized workflows.
Tool integration
Model and chat platforms have always sought to offer integrations, aiming to cut the time users spend building their app versions.
OpenAI added third-party apps into ChatGPT and launched a new App Directory in December 2025. This brought in offerings from companies such as Canva, Expedia and Figma that users can invoke by using “@” mentions while prompting on the chatbot.
However, three months in, it’s unclear exactly how many people use ChatGPT Apps, particularly in enterprises — will Claude’s Marketplace be able achieve more success here, given rising enterprise adoption of Claude and Anthropic products?
ChatGPT’s focus in its integrated apps was on retail and individual consumer-focused tasks rather than the enterprise more broadly, but the company has also tried to appeal to that market with new plugins for ChatGPT released alongside its new GPT-5.4 this week.
Other AI tool marketplaces have also cropped up. Lightning AI launched an AI Hub last year following similar moves from AWS and Hugging Face. Many AI marketplaces, such as Salesforce’s, focus on surfacing AI agents that may already have the capabilities customers need.
How does Anthropic’s solution stand out from these? Asked for comment a spokesperson responded:
“Claude is a model — it reasons, writes, analyzes, and codes. But Harvey isn’t just Claude with a legal prompt. It’s a purpose-built platform built for how legal teams actually work — with the domain expertise, workflow integrations, compliance infrastructure, and institutional knowledge that enterprises require. Same with Rogo for finance, Snowflake for enterprise data, or GitLab for software development. These partners have spent years building the product layer on top of Claude that makes it useful for specific industries and workflows.
That’s actually the point. Thousands of businesses use Claude to power their products — and the best ones have built something Claude alone can’t replicate. Claude Marketplace isn’t Anthropic trying to replace those products. It’s Anthropic investing in them — making it easier for enterprises to access the best Claude-powered tools without managing a separate procurement process for each one. Claude is the intelligence layer. Our partners are the product.”
Native vs app
Enterprise users adapted their Claude or ChatGPT platforms to recognize preferences, connect to their data sources and retain context. So much of how people use enterprise AI these days focuses on customizability, on making the system work for their needs.
Platforms like OpenClaw also allowed people to set up autonomous agents that can have full access to their computers to complete tasks and execute workflows. In other words, Claude and other platforms can already do much of the work that these new third-party Marketplace tools enable — provided they have the right context and data.
However, third-party tools and integrations allow enterprise users to avoid doing the work themselves and instead invoke an existing tool to handle it. For those whose businesses are built around specific, tool-based workflows, the Marketplace may be exactly the right AI integration for them. In addition, there’s also a good chance that enterprises already paying for Claude may now take advantage of the new Marketplace to explore third-party tools and services they wouldn’t have otherwise.
While it’s still unclear what Claude Marketplace would look like in action, it’s possible that, with these tools, enterprises could use Claude as an orchestrator, where the platform acts as a command center that taps the right tool and accesses the right context without constantly prompting.
Observers noted that Claude Marketplace offers enterprises a way to “pre-approve” apps, bypassing the often long and cautious approval process.
Some people noted that Anthropic’s move tracks with how many businesses will want to work directly with the platforms without requiring users to move to their separate offerings.
Anthropic’s biggest challenge with Claude Marketplace, however, is adoption. Many of the partners for its launch already have enterprise customers who deploy their tools through an API or already connect via MCP or other protocols for context.
Some users may have already vibe-coded apps that tap into these integrations. It’s now a matter of enterprise users showing they want to use these new tools within their Claude workflows.