Anthropic is increasing the usage limits on Claude Code, its AI-driven coding assistant. The company attributes this expansion to a new enterprise partnership with SpaceX.
What Changed and Why
Claude Code helps developers write, edit, and debug software using Anthropic’s Claude AI models. Like many AI services, it has “rate limits” — restrictions on how many requests a user can make within a specific timeframe before experiencing slowdowns or interruptions. These limits have frustrated developers who depend on the tool for heavy daily tasks.
According to Anthropic, the SpaceX deal provided enough extra computing power to justify doubling these limits for all users. In simpler terms, more enterprise customers mean more funds to acquire additional servers, which translates to more capacity for everyone to use the service without facing restrictions.
This isn’t Anthropic’s first major enterprise partnership. The San Francisco-based AI company has already formed similar agreements with Microsoft and Amazon, among others. SpaceX now joins that list as a key client. Interestingly, Anthropic has shown interest in SpaceX’s plans for orbital data centers. These could eventually provide the company with computing infrastructure located in space.
The SpaceX Angle
SpaceX is actively working on data centers in orbit as part of a broader initiative toward space-based computing infrastructure. Anthropic’s interest in this project is significant because running AI models requires a lot of computing power. Gaining access to extra data center capacity, no matter where it’s located, is one of the main challenges AI companies face today.
While it’s still uncertain if any deal for orbital data centers will happen, the interest suggests that Anthropic is planning for the future beyond its current infrastructure.
| Anthropic — Company Snapshot | |
|---|---|
| Founded | 2021 |
| Headquarters | San Francisco, CA |
| CEO | Dario Amodei |
| Sector | Artificial Intelligence |
| Claude Code Limit Change | Rate limits doubled |
| Notable Enterprise Partners | SpaceX, Microsoft, Amazon |
What This Means for Everyday Users
If you’re a developer using Claude Code, you’ll see a noticeable change: you should encounter fewer interruptions while you work. Rate limits on AI coding tools are similar to data caps on a mobile plan. You might not notice them until a critical moment when you suddenly get throttled. Doubling those limits allows developers to work longer without disruptions.
For those who aren’t developers, this development highlights how the AI industry sustains itself. Anthropic securing SpaceX as an enterprise client isn’t just a financial win — it opens a direct channel to more infrastructure, which ultimately benefits everyone using the platform. Enterprise deals are crucial for subsidizing and enhancing consumer-facing AI tools.
This trend also illustrates a growing pattern in the AI sector. The largest AI labs are aggressively pursuing major corporate clients because these contracts support the massive computing investments needed to maintain large-scale models.
Community Reactions
“Finally. The rate limits on Claude Code have been the single biggest reason I keep switching back to other tools mid-project. Doubling them is a real quality-of-life fix.”
“Interesting that they’re calling out SpaceX specifically. That’s Anthropic telling other big companies: ‘look who’s using us, you should too.’ It’s as much a marketing move as a product announcement.”
What To Watch
- Orbital data center talks: Anthropic’s interest in SpaceX’s planned space-based infrastructure is something to keep an eye on. Any formal agreement would be a groundbreaking step for an AI company’s computing strategy.
- Competitor responses: OpenAI, Google, and others with competing coding assistants — like GitHub Copilot and Gemini Code Assist — will likely feel pressure to match or exceed Anthropic’s new limits.
- Further enterprise announcements: Following the pattern with Microsoft, Amazon, and now SpaceX, more large-scale partnerships from Anthropic seem likely in the coming months, each potentially unlocking additional capacity improvements.
Sources: Ars Technica | Engadget
Ava Mitchell
Ava Mitchell is a digital culture journalist at Explosion.com covering social media platforms, streaming services, and the creator economy. With 4 years reporting on TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, and the apps that shape daily life, Ava specializes in explaining platform policy changes and their impact on everyday users. She previously managed social media strategy for a tech startup, giving her firsthand experience with the platforms she now covers.


