OpenAI Plans Sharp AI Price Cuts As Anthropic Rivalry Heats Up Ahead Of Both Companies’ IPOs
The AI industry’s two most famous rivals are on the verge of a pricing war that could change the sector’s economics, just as both companies prepare to go public. According to persons familiar with the situation published by the Wall Street Journal on June 11, 2026, OpenAI is considering large price cuts for its services in anticipation of comparable cost reductions from rival Anthropic. The ChatGPT developer is considering a variety of cost-cutting measures, including lowering the price of tokens, the unit of measurement used by AI companies to bill for their products if Anthropic follows the same. Nothing has been resolved yet, since the debates are still ongoing.
The timing has clear competitive weight. OpenAI now charges clients via tiered memberships of $8, $20, and $100 or more. Anthropic costs $17 per month for an annual membership to Claude Pro, and $100 or more per month for Claude Max. Both businesses filed for IPOs within days of each other, with Anthropic on June 7 and OpenAI on June 8, putting their economics in front of public investors for the first time at the same time they are weighing measures that would further compress already low margins.
“OpenAI is mulling sharp price cuts to its AI offerings to woo consumers away from rival Anthropic, the Wall Street Journal reported. The company is weighing significant cuts to what it charges for tokens, in anticipation of similar cuts it expects from Anthropic.”~CNBC
Sam Altman Admitted The Problem: Token Costs Are A “Huge Issue”
The price cut discussion did not emerge from nowhere. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman had already been publicly signalling the direction. At a recent event, Altman acknowledged that the rising cost of AI tokens has become a “huge issue” for enterprise customers, adding: “We’ll have a lot of ways we can help people get more value for less spend.”
The price debate is being driven by genuine competitive pressure. Anthropic’s coding tool caused company revenue to soar. The business briefly surpassed OpenAI’s worth after Claude Code went viral among software programmers. Anthropic finished its Series H investment round at a valuation of $965 billion, somewhat surpassing OpenAI, which was valued at $852 billion in March. Since then, OpenAI has prioritized Codex, its own coding tool, in an effort to regain enterprise momentum.
A phenomenon called “tokenmaxxing”, the practice of burning through AI tokens at high volume without a clear return has started producing backlash among enterprise buyers. An Uber executive confirmed the company had exhausted its entire 2026 AI spending budget on agentic use cases. Another executive said last month it was difficult to link AI-driven coding productivity gains to actual product improvements that customers could see. Those admissions have sparked a boarder reckoning in Silicon Valley about whether token spend is delivering proportionate value.
“OpenAI wants to slash prices after CEO Sam Altman said steep token costs were a ‘huge issue’. The company is considering drastic price cuts, anticipating a price war with Anthropic, as both companies race toward IPOs.”~Forbes
Why Cutting Prices Is Both Logical And Risky At The Same Time?
The structural tension in the pricing war discourse is difficult to ignore. Both OpenAI and Anthropic are already losing billions of dollars per year due to the massive computational expenses required to run frontier AI models at scale, and lowering token pricing will further squeeze margins just as both businesses are asking public investors to buy into their tales.
ChatGPT became the first app to reach 1 billion monthly app users in May 2026 roughly three years after its November 2022 launch surpassing the record previously held by Google Maps. That user base gives OpenAI scale advantages that a margin-compressing price cut could theoretically leverage into a winner-take-most outcome. But the same logic applies to Anthropic, which has been growing its enterprise customer base aggressively on the back of Claude Code’s viral adoption.
“OpenAI is weighing significant price cuts in anticipation of similar moves from Anthropic, hinting at the possibility of a pricing war ahead of their expected public offerings. The ChatGPT creator is considering reducing token prices if Anthropic does the same.”~Bloomberg
China Waiting In The Wings And The Race To $1 Trillion:
JPMorgan analysts recently noted that “investors have been discussing the possibility that much of the token spend that corporate America is currently incurring is ‘wasted’”, a comment that adds to the pressure on both companies to show that lower prices translate into higher adoption and, ultimately, higher revenue, rather than simply margin destruction.
OpenAI is aiming for a valuation of up to $1 trillion when it debuts on the public market, which may happen as soon as September 2026. At that level, OpenAI would be among a small group of companies ever to debut at a trillion-dollar valuation. The price war with Anthropic, if it materialises, will be one of the most closely watched competitive dynamics in those IPO documents both for what it reveals about each company’s confidence in its own cost structure, and for what it signals about where AI product economics are headed over the next two to three years.
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