AI

Code with Claude 2026: 5 lessons for UK SMEs from the London keynote

Code with Claude 2026 came to London on 19 May with Managed Agents, Multiagent Orchestration, Outcomes and Dreaming. We unpack what each one means for UK SMEs, the new usage-based pricing reality, and how Claude now compares to Copilot and Gemini for UK firms.

Anthropic abstract illustration marking Claude Code USD1bn annualised milestone

Code with Claude 2026 visited London on 19 May, sat between the San Francisco kickoff on 6 May and the Tokyo close on 10 June, and the announcements that landed there set the agenda for every UK small and medium business deciding how to use Claude in the next twelve months. Anthropic did not ship a new model on stage. What it did ship matters more for a UK accountancy firm, recruitment consultancy or marketing agency than another benchmark tick: managed agents, multi-agent orchestration, doubled rate limits, and a clear signal that the next year of competitive lift for Anthropic comes from how Claude works, not how much Claude knows.

Key facts for UK SMEs
  • Code with Claude 2026 keynote streamed free on Anthropic’s official Claude YouTube channel; London leg took place on 19 May 2026.
  • Anthropic launched Claude Managed Agents with sandboxed code execution, checkpointing and credential scoping.
  • Three keynote features for UK teams: Multiagent Orchestration, Outcomes (success-criteria iteration) and Dreaming (cross-session recall).
  • Anthropic shifted pricing to usage-based for enterprise, dropping the prior flat-fee structure.
  • Annualised revenue passed USD30bn in early April 2026; Claude Code passed USD1bn annualised in May 2026.

Why Code with Claude 2026 mattered for a UK audience

The London leg of the conference is the part most UK firms missed in the noise. Anthropic chose London as its second of three stops, ahead of Tokyo, which is a clear statement that the UK market sits among Anthropic’s top three commercial priorities. Senior Anthropic leaders, including Brad Abrams, ran the London sessions on managed agents and the new Claude Code SDK in person, and a number of UK enterprise customers including major UK retail banks were in the room. The reason that matters for a UK SME is the work being done on agent governance in London directly answers the questions UK regulators are now asking of every AI deployment.

The headline number Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei dropped on stage is the one a UK CFO should read. “First-quarter 2026 revenue and usage, on an annualised basis, grew 80x rather than the 10x Anthropic had planned,” Amodei said. For a UK SME deciding whether to commit to Claude over Microsoft Copilot or Google Gemini for the next renewal cycle, that growth number is two things at once: a vote of confidence in the platform’s staying power, and a warning that capacity may be tight if every UK firm makes the same decision at the same time. The doubled rate limits Anthropic shipped at the keynote are a direct response to that capacity pressure.

Managed Agents: what changes for a UK SME this quarter

Claude Managed Agents is the announcement with the most immediate UK SME impact. The product gives a UK business the ability to deploy a Claude-powered agent that runs sandboxed code on Anthropic’s infrastructure, with checkpointing so a long-running task can pause and resume, and credential scoping so the agent only sees the data it needs to do the job at hand. For a UK accountancy firm that wants Claude to reconcile a client’s Xero ledger against a HMRC submission, the credential scoping means the agent gets the Xero API token for one client at a time, and nothing else. That is the answer to the Information Commissioner’s Office “minimum necessary data” principle.

Anthropic announces Claude Code reaching $1bn milestone, relevant for UK SMEs evaluating Claude Code adoption
Image: Anthropic

Multiagent Orchestration is the second piece, and it is the one that changes how a small UK team can scale. Until now, a UK SME using Claude has been writing prompts for a single agent at a time. Multiagent Orchestration lets a single prompt break into a fleet of specialised agents that hand work between each other. For a UK marketing agency producing campaign content, that means one agent can draft copy, another can fact-check it against the client’s brief, a third can generate the supporting social posts, and a fourth can prepare the brief for the human reviewer, all without a marketing manager scheduling the steps. The keynote demo did this for a marketing campaign in under three minutes.

The Outcomes feature: success criteria UK clients will actually read

Outcomes is the third keynote feature, and it is the one a UK SME owner should be reading the documentation on right now. The idea is to let a user define what success looks like for a given Claude task, in plain English, and have Claude iterate until it meets those criteria before returning a result. For a UK solicitor’s office asking Claude to draft a Section 25 notice under the Landlord and Tenant Act 1954, the success criteria could be: “cites the correct sections, identifies the relevant ground from a-g, includes the required statutory wording, returns a result the partner does not need to redraft.” Outcomes lets Claude self-check against that list before handing back a draft.

The practical effect for a UK SME is a shift in what work looks like. A junior solicitor today drafts a Section 25 notice, a partner reviews it, sends it back with corrections, the junior redrafts, the partner reviews again. With Outcomes, the partner defines the success criteria once, the agent iterates against them, and the partner reviews the result. The first iteration is much closer to acceptable, which compresses the review loop. UK firms that already use Claude.ai or the API should be testing Outcomes against their highest-volume drafting workflows this month, ahead of any procurement decisions in the autumn.

Dreaming and what session memory means for UK confidentiality

Dreaming is the most novel and most carefully framed announcement Anthropic made. The feature lets Claude recall what happened in previous sessions and build on past work, which is the persistent memory that every previous Claude generation explicitly did not have. The framing matters because UK confidentiality rules and the Information Commissioner’s Office’s expectations around data minimisation cut directly against “AI that remembers everything.” Anthropic addressed that by making Dreaming opt-in per workspace, with explicit user controls on what gets remembered, and with credential-scoping that mirrors the managed agents pattern.

Anthropic advancing Claude for financial services, with UK GDPR data-handling implications for UK regulated SMEs
Image: Anthropic
Anthropic Claude accelerating scientific research applications
Image: Anthropic

For a UK SME, the practical guidance is simple. Turn Dreaming on for internal-only workflows where remembering matters, such as an account manager building a long-running brief on a single client. Leave Dreaming off for any workflow where the data leaving Anthropic’s infrastructure would breach a contractual confidentiality obligation, particularly if you handle UK financial services, legal services, or healthcare data. The default Anthropic recommends, which is opt-in per workspace rather than account-wide, is the right one for any UK firm to adopt as policy.

The new pricing reality: usage-based and what it means for UK budgets

Anthropic shifted from flat-fee enterprise pricing to a usage-based model at Code with Claude 2026, which is the change a UK finance director should be paying the most attention to. The old structure billed a fixed monthly fee per seat with capped usage; the new structure bills per token consumed, with discounts for higher commit volumes. For a UK SME that uses Claude heavily for a small subset of users, this is good news: usage scales with actual work done, not with seat count. For a UK SME that bought a fleet of Claude licences and uses them lightly, the cost may rise once the renewal lands.

The Vercel data point Anthropic shared on stage is the one to internalise. “Opus tokens represent around 23% of usage but more than 70% of spend.” Translated to a UK SME budget, that means three quarters of a Claude bill will sit on the Opus tier of model, even if the majority of prompts use Sonnet. Most UK SMEs will need to set a per-team policy on when an Opus prompt is justified, because the cost difference is real and visible in the new pricing. Brad Abrams at Anthropic put the trade-off plainly: “We get close to Opus level intelligence at much lower prices because we are being very conservative about the tokens.” UK firms should expect to set Sonnet as default and Opus as deliberate opt-in.

Claude Code, the developer story, and UK contractors

Claude Code crossed USD1bn in annualised revenue in May 2026, which makes it the fastest-growing developer tool in Anthropic’s history and a serious competitor to GitHub Copilot for UK independent developers and small studios. The Code with Claude keynote added remote session control across devices, a split-view GUI, an Auto Mode that classifies permissions automatically, and routines for scheduled execution via cron or webhooks. For a UK contractor billing by the hour to a UK client, the routines feature alone changes the maths. A scheduled Claude Code routine can run nightly maintenance, refactor, and test passes against a client’s codebase without consuming the contractor’s daytime hours, which can either lower the bill to the client or free hours for new business.

Anthropic advancing Claude for education sector use cases
Image: Anthropic

The Mario Rodriguez quote from the keynote stage is the one any UK developer should hold onto. As GitHub’s Chief Product Officer, Rodriguez emphasised that cache hit rates above 94% are now foundational, and that “1% efficiency means millions overall.” For a UK independent developer running Claude Code locally against a UK client’s codebase, what Rodriguez was saying is that Anthropic and GitHub have figured out how to make the per-prompt cost of an AI development workflow drop sharply as a project’s history accumulates. The first week on a new codebase is the expensive week; the months that follow are dramatically cheaper. That changes the contractor pricing conversation.

Claude vs Copilot vs Gemini: the UK SME decision tree

For a UK SME buying once and renewing for a year, the practical choice still comes down to Claude, Microsoft 365 Copilot, or Google Gemini Workspace. The Code with Claude announcements sharpen the case for Claude in three specific UK use cases. First, any UK SME where confidentiality is a contractual or regulatory obligation should prefer Claude for the constitutional AI safety framing that has held up under Information Commissioner’s Office scrutiny better than the competing systems. Second, any UK SME running multi-step content or analysis work benefits more from Multiagent Orchestration than from Copilot’s chat-and-edit pattern. Third, any UK SME with serious developer headcount should prefer Claude Code, which beats GitHub Copilot on routines and remote sessions.

Anthropic-Accenture partnership announcement, illustrating Claude Code enterprise adoption pattern UK SMEs can follow
Image: Anthropic

Microsoft 365 Copilot still wins when the SME is already deep on Microsoft 365 with Word, Excel, Outlook and Teams as the primary tools, because Copilot lives inside those apps natively. Google Gemini Workspace wins when the SME runs on Workspace and uses Gmail, Docs and Sheets as the primary tools. Claude wins when the SME wants to use AI as a layer above any productivity stack, with explicit per-workflow controls and credential scoping. For most UK SMEs, the answer is to run two: Claude for analysis and Copilot or Gemini for in-app productivity, and the new usage-based Claude pricing makes that combination cheaper than it was three months ago.

The honest summary for UK SME buyers

If you run a UK SME today, the practical to-do list out of Code with Claude 2026 is short. Turn on Multiagent Orchestration for your highest-volume content or analysis workflow this month and measure the time saved. Set Outcomes against the three drafting tasks your team redoes most often. Leave Dreaming off until you have written a workspace policy for it that your data protection lead has signed off. Move budget planning from flat-fee assumptions to usage-based, and budget for an Opus default cost overshoot of around 70% on the Sonnet baseline.

And if you are a UK developer or run a small UK dev studio, the more important question is whether Claude Code’s routines and remote session control change what your billable day looks like. The answer for most UK contractors is yes, and the firms that adapt first will be the firms that win UK enterprise work over the next twelve months. For our take on how Anthropic’s roadmap fits UK regulated industries specifically, see our recent guides on Claude for UK accountants and the upcoming Claude for UK solicitors safe-use guide, both of which apply directly to the Outcomes and Dreaming pattern Anthropic shipped at the keynote.

Code with Claude 2026 opening keynote. Source: Claude on YouTube.
TakeawayWhat it means for UK readers
Managed Agents change procurementUK SMEs no longer need DevOps to run Claude agents in production
Outcomes feature replaces sprint planningSuccess criteria become the contract; UK clients will read them
Session memory raises confidentiality barUK firms in regulated sectors need fresh data-handling policy
Usage-based pricingUK SME budgets need monthly variance modelling, not flat licence cost
Claude Code lowers contractor day-rate floorUK contractor market re-prices around productivity, not hours
Code with Claude 2026: 5 lessons for UK SMEs. MTW editorial summary, June 2026.

What we like, what we’d watch

What we likeWhat we’d watch
Managed Agents make Claude production-ready for UK SMEs without a DevOps hireUsage-based pricing requires UK SMEs to model token spend monthly — flat-fee accounting won’t work anymore
Outcomes feature gives UK client work a concrete acceptance contract — billable scope, not vibesSession memory raises GDPR Article 32 questions UK regulated firms haven’t answered yet
Claude Code expansion lowers the cost of UK contractor work without offshoringAnthropic UK data-residency commitments are still Enterprise-only — Pro and Team users get US-region inference
MTW verdict matrix. Editorially independent; no affiliate weighting.

Sources

UK reader FAQ

What is Code with Claude 2026?

Code with Claude 2026 was Anthropic’s developer-focused conference held in London in May 2026, the first major Anthropic event hosted in the UK. The keynote covered Claude Opus 4 capabilities, multi-agent orchestration, constitutional AI safety guarantees and the UK-specific data-residency story.

How can UK SMEs access Claude Opus 4?

UK SMEs can access Claude Opus 4 directly via claude.ai (Pro at £18/month, Team at £25/user/month) or via the Anthropic API. AWS Bedrock and Microsoft Azure AI Foundry both offer Claude Opus 4 in UK regions for businesses that want consolidated cloud billing.

Is Claude better than ChatGPT for UK business writing?

For long-form business writing in British English, Claude’s tone alignment is noticeably better out of the box than ChatGPT’s. ChatGPT will reach the same place with prompting, but UK SMEs writing customer-facing copy save real time on the editing pass with Claude.

What is constitutional AI and why does it matter to UK businesses?

Constitutional AI is Anthropic’s training framework that uses a written set of principles to guide model behaviour during training. For UK regulated businesses, it produces a more auditable safety story that lines up with Ofcom and ICO expectations around explainability and harm-avoidance documentation.

How does Claude handle UK GDPR and data residency?

Anthropic’s enterprise tier offers UK and EU data residency commitments with contractual SCC clauses. For most UK SMEs the Team plan’s no-training-on-customer-data default is sufficient; UK regulated firms should ask Anthropic about the enterprise data-processing addendum.

Where can UK SMEs watch the Code with Claude 2026 keynote?

Anthropic posted the full keynote on its YouTube channel at youtube.com/@AnthropicAI within 48 hours of the London event. The session breakouts are on the Anthropic site under the Code with Claude landing page, with UK SME case studies featured separately.

How much does Claude Pro cost in the UK in June 2026?

Anthropic prices Claude Pro at $20 per month in the US, which currently bills to UK cards at around £19 per month including VAT. Claude Team is $30 per user per month (around £28 in the UK) with a 5-seat minimum. There is no UK-region-specific pricing tier; payment is processed in USD by Anthropic.

Does Anthropic offer UK data residency for Claude business plans?

Anthropic uses AWS UK regions for Claude inference on Enterprise plans signed via Anthropic UK Ltd. UK SMEs on Claude Team currently get US-region inference with EU GDPR-compliant data handling but not UK-region residency. UK regulated industries (financial services, public sector) should request Enterprise terms before committing production workloads.

Is Claude Code allowed for UK contractor IR35 work?

Yes. IR35 applies to the employment relationship between contractor and end-client, not the tools the contractor uses. Using Claude Code to deliver contracted work does not change the contractor’s IR35 status. However, contractors should confirm with the end-client that AI-generated code is permitted by the contract and IP terms before delivery.

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