Claude just made its most powerful tools free — from file creation to app integration, all without ads

Claude Free Plan Upgrade
(Image credit: Anthropic)

  • Anthropic has opened Claude’s most advanced features to all free users
  • Claude's file creation, Connectors and customizable Skills features are now available to anyone
  • The free plans have also upgraded voice and image search and can handle longer conversations

Anthropic has deployed a host of advanced AI tools reserved for premium Claude subscribers to its free tier. Now anyone using Claude can access the chatbot's file creation, Connectors, and customizable Skills features.

The company has also enhanced the free tier version of Claude to hold longer conversations and offer better interactive displays, voice features, and image search.

The rollout represents a major escalation in accessibility to high-end AI tools. It brings professional-grade features to the same category of users who, until now, could only experiment with them a little bit.

These upgrades come at a moment when competing platforms like ChatGPT, Gemini, and others are exploring ways of making AI chatbots more profitable through new subscriptions, paywalls, and monetization strategies like ChatGPT ads. Claude’s free plan enhancements are a strong and deliberate contrast.

Files, connections, and skills

File creation alone is arguably a huge deal, allowing free users to generate usable PowerPoint decks, spreadsheets, PDFs, and Word documents directly inside a conversation.

You can turn a text request into a working document almost instantly. For instance, you could describe a budget you want to set up and see your vague goals become a spreadsheet with built-in formulas.

Or if you wanted a slide deck complete with narration, you just have to outline the broad strokes of the presentation you have in mind. By moving these outputs directly into the free tier, Anthropic has removed a major barrier to everyday utility.

Meanwhile, Connectors allow Claude to act on behalf of a user inside their calendars, email inboxes, or design platforms like Canva. Instead of simply supplying text to be copied elsewhere, Claude can use Connectors to work inside the tools people already rely on.

The Skills feature further extends this way of thinking by training Claude to perform in ways you prefer. You might teach Claude to format reports with a certain aesthetic, write emails in their voice, or follow specific brand guidelines for documents.

The Skills tool reworks one-time instructions into long-term memory. This kind of customization has traditionally been limited to enterprise or business tiers in other AI ecosystems.

Claude on a smartphone.

(Image credit: Getty Images/Smith Collection/Gado)

Recognizing simulated reality

For an average user who only interacted with AI in small bursts before, Claude’s new capabilities can change the rhythm of personal organization. Anthropic has made a clear statement about where it sees Claude in the AI ecosystem.

Opening the gates to its more powerful features paints a picture of AI as a utility more than a luxury. Future AI assistants may be judged not just by their intelligence but by how seamlessly they integrate into the fabric of everyday life.

Claude’s expanded free suite gives the broadest possible audience access to tools that handle real work, turning AI from something people occasionally check into something they consistently use. As the competition intensifies, this decision could reshape expectations around what “free AI” means, and just how free it really is.


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Eric Hal Schwartz
Contributor

Eric Hal Schwartz is a freelance writer for TechRadar with more than 15 years of experience covering the intersection of the world and technology. For the last five years, he served as head writer for Voicebot.ai and was on the leading edge of reporting on generative AI and large language models. He's since become an expert on the products of generative AI models, such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Anthropic’s Claude, Google Gemini, and every other synthetic media tool. His experience runs the gamut of media, including print, digital, broadcast, and live events. Now, he's continuing to tell the stories people want and need to hear about the rapidly evolving AI space and its impact on their lives. Eric is based in New York City.

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