
Stainless does not sell primarily to enterprises, but its tools form part of the software development chain that enterprise teams may rely on. They help generate SDKs, documentation, and MCP servers that developers can use to connect AI models, cloud services, and APIs to business applications.
In a statement, Stainless said it will wind down all hosted products, including its SDK generator, as the team shifts focus to Claude Platform capabilities and connecting agents to APIs. Existing customers will retain the right to modify and extend SDKs they have already generated.
This could have competitive implications. Stainless has listed OpenAI, Google DeepMind, Perplexity, Groq, and Cloudflare among its customers, showing how widely its tools have been used across the AI and cloud infrastructure markets. Some customers may need replacement tooling or in-house alternatives to update and maintain those SDKs as their APIs evolve.
The acquisition gives Anthropic more control over a growing layer of developer infrastructure as AI vendors compete to make their models easier to integrate into enterprise software environments. That could strengthen Claude’s appeal to teams building agentic systems, while prompting existing Stainless customers to reassess how they generate and maintain SDKs over time.