How to get significant AI credits from the Anthropic VC partner program
Most startups do not know they can access significant AI credits through the Anthropic partner network. This guide covers how the program actually works, who qualifies, what you get beyond the headline number, and why the other benefits often matter more than the credits themselves.

Key takeaways
- Two distinct paths to credits - The VC Partner Program provides benefits through your existing investors, while the Anthology Fund (now 30+ portfolio companies) offers direct investment plus credits
- Credits are just the entry point - They come bundled with premium rate limits, direct access to Anthropic teams, and exclusive events that often matter more than the dollar amount
- Your investors determine eligibility - You can't apply directly as a startup; your VC firm must be an approved Anthropic partner first
- Don't fixate on the headline number - Rate limits and technical support frequently prove more valuable than credits alone, especially once you're scaling in production
Odds are your venture investors already have Anthropic credits sitting unclaimed. They just never mention it.
I keep running into this same situation with early-stage startups and companies at the growth stage. They’re paying full price for Claude API access while their VC firm has an Anthropic partnership collecting dust. It’s a real disconnect. Frustrating, honestly, because asking one simple question could change their entire infrastructure cost structure.
Anthropic has grown into a 300,000-business platform valued among the most valuable AI companies in the world. The partner program has scaled alongside it. What follows is what you actually need to know about getting meaningful AI resources through it, including the parts that don’t make headlines.
The two paths to Anthropic credits
Anthropic runs two programs that people constantly confuse. Knowing which one applies to you is step one.
The VC Partner Program flows through existing venture capital firms. If your investors are Anthropic partners, you get access to credits, events, and rate limit boosts. You can’t apply directly. Your VC firm applies first, then distributes benefits to their portfolio companies.
The Anthology Fund is a different animal entirely. This substantial venture fund, run with Menlo Ventures, makes actual investments in startups. Portfolio companies receive significant AI credits as part of the investment package. From thousands of applicants, they selected 18 companies in their first cohort. Within a year, the fund had backed over 30 companies, with several moving from seed to lead-stage investments. Applications for Batch 2 are open.
Most startups can get in through their VCs. The Anthology Fund is highly selective and ties investment directly to the credits.
What you actually get beyond the credit amount
Credits are the headline. The other stuff is why the program actually matters.
Premium rate limits come standard with the program. When you’re building production applications, rate limits decide whether you can realistically scale. Standard API accounts hit walls fast. Partner program participants start at the highest publicly available tier from day one. That’s worth more than most founders realize until they need it.
Direct access to Anthropic teams is genuinely useful. Technical support from people who actually understand what you’re building. Office hours. Advance notice of updates that might break your implementation. I’ve seen this kind of access save months of debugging time. Could it do the same for you? Probably, if you actually use it.
The events and community dimension matters more than it sounds. Quarterly deep dives where Anthropic engineers explain model improvements. Biannual demo days with other builders in the same space. Real connections with companies working through the same problems you are.
The official terms cover all of this, but most coverage fixates on the dollar amounts. Credits run out. Rate limits and relationships compound over time.
How to actually get in
You can’t fill out a form and join as a startup. This program runs top-down.
Start by checking whether your investors are already partners. Ask directly. Many VCs have these partnerships but don’t broadcast them. If they’re partners, they have a unique application link for portfolio companies. That’s your path.
If your VCs aren’t partners yet, they need to apply first. Anthropic evaluates firms based on fund performance, AI investment strategy, and existing Claude usage among their portfolio. Selection happens on a rolling basis.
Geographic restrictions apply. Companies in Belarus, China, Cuba, Iran, Myanmar, North Korea, Russia, Sudan, Syria, Crimea, Donetsk, or Luhansk aren’t eligible. US export controls govern the whole thing.
For the Anthology Fund, Menlo Ventures runs the application process separately. Most investments start as modest early-stage checks, targeting pre-seed through Series A, with the fund following on for companies showing real traction. The AI credits come as part of the investment, not instead of it.
What startups get wrong
Treating this as free money. That’s mistake number one.
Credits expire. Typically 12 months. If you’re not building with Claude yet, applying too early wastes the benefit. Companies burn through credits on experiments that never ship, then hit rate limits when they finally go to production. Done. Credits gone.
Ignoring rate limits in favor of chasing credit amounts is also a trap. A company with modest credits and premium rate limits can scale faster than one with substantial credits on a standard plan. At millions of tokens daily, throughput beats discounts every time.
Not using the network is leaving real value behind. The events connect you with companies solving your exact problems. Office hours give you direct access to people who designed the models. This kind of guidance prevents mistakes that cost far more than any credit package.
And comparing programs purely on credit amounts misses the point. AWS offers Bedrock credits through various startup programs. Google Cloud provides credits through their startup program, usable toward Claude via Vertex AI. But those are cloud infrastructure credits with AI access attached. The Anthropic partner program gives you specialized support for building with Claude. That’s a different thing.
Making it work once you’re in
Map your actual usage pattern before anything else. If you’re still in prototype territory, standard API access might be fine for now. Credits matter most when you’re in production or already processing significant volume. Apply when you’ll actually use them, not when you first hear about the program.
Track your rate limit needs, not just your spending. Most startups hit rate limits before they hit budget ceilings. If you’re making thousands of API calls daily, premium limits become essential. Credits without the rate limit upgrade won’t solve the real problem.
Use the technical access aggressively. Book office hours before you’re stuck, not after. Attend workshops even when you think you don’t need them. Learn how other companies handle prompt optimization, caching, and error recovery. The patterns you pick up prevent problems that would otherwise cost weeks of engineering time.
Plan your credit burn rate intentionally. If you have significant credits for 12 months, structure development so you’re ramping up throughout the period rather than burning everything in month one. The companies that graduate to paying customers do so because they built something real.
Consider the Anthology Fund path only if you actually need venture funding. The credits are a bonus, not the reason to take investment. Menlo has backed companies like OpenRouter and Goodfire, then doubled down on the ones with real traction. The fund wants companies building serious AI infrastructure, not just API consumers.
Credits get startups in the door. Everything else determines whether they stay.
If your investors are already partners, ask for the application link today. If they’re not, send them the partner program details and ask whether they’re interested. The application takes minutes. Most startups spend weeks hunting for credits when their VCs could give them access immediately. Check first. Apply second. Build third.
About the Author
Amit Kothari is an experienced consultant, advisor, coach, and educator specializing in AI and operations for executives and their companies. With 25+ years of experience and as the founder of Tallyfy (raised $3.6m), he helps mid-size companies identify, plan, and implement practical AI solutions that actually work. Originally British and now based in St. Louis, MO, Amit combines deep technical expertise with real-world business understanding.
Disclaimer: The content in this article represents personal opinions based on extensive research and practical experience. While every effort has been made to ensure accuracy through data analysis and source verification, this should not be considered professional advice. Always consult with qualified professionals for decisions specific to your situation.