Claude Review
Anthropic's assistant tuned for long-context reasoning.
Product overview
Claude from Anthropic has become a serious daily driver for writing, analysis and coding. Its long context window and calibrated tone make it a favorite for research and editorial workflows.
Product screenshots
Live capture of the Claude homepage and product interface. Brand assets shown for editorial review purposes.
Key features
Projects
Persistent context and files per workspace.
Artifacts
Live-render code, docs and diagrams in-thread.
Computer Use
Beta agent that controls a virtual desktop.
Team Workspace
Shared conversations and admin controls.
Pros & cons
Pros
- 200k-token context window
- Excellent writing tone
- Projects and artifacts feature
- Constitutional AI safety approach
Cons
- No image generation
- Team tier trails ChatGPT features
- Rate limits on free plan
Pricing
| Plan | Price | Includes |
|---|---|---|
| Free | $0 | Daily message limits, standard model. |
| Pro | $20/mo | 5x more usage and Projects. |
| Team | $30/user/mo | Shared context and admin. |
Who Claude is best for
Writers, analysts and developers who value long-context accuracy.
Alternatives to Claude
Frequently asked questions
What is Claude?
Claude is anthropic's assistant tuned for long-context reasoning. Claude from Anthropic has become a serious daily driver for writing, analysis and coding. Its long context window and calibrated tone make it a favorite for research and editorial workflows.
How much does Claude cost?
Claude pricing starts at $20/mo. Full plan breakdown is in the pricing section above.
Does Claude offer a free trial?
Yes, Claude offers a free trial or free tier so you can evaluate before committing.
Who is Claude best for?
Claude is best for writers, analysts and developers who value long-context accuracy.
What are the best alternatives to Claude?
Top alternatives in the AI Tools category include chatgpt-team.
Priya Shah
Editor at CodeTag — Priya edits CodeTag's AI and productivity coverage. She previously ran content at an AI infrastructure startup and has written for Wired and MIT Technology Review.