Anthropic'sClaude Fable 5 loses its subscription-included access on Jul. 7, after which the model costs double Claude Opus 4.8, pushing many users back toward the cheaper option. Key Points:
Anthropic'sClaude Fable 5 loses its subscription-included access on Jul. 7, after which the model costs double Claude Opus 4.8, pushing many users back toward the cheaper option.
Key Points:
- Fable 5 stays included on paid Anthropic plans only through Jul. 7, then shifts to metered usage credits.
- Credits run $10 per million input tokens and $50 per million output, twice the rate of Opus 4.8.
- Flagged Fable 5 requests fall back to Opus 4.8, which many users say already handles their daily work.
Fable 5 Pricing Cliff
The model returned to users worldwide on Jul. 1, about three weeks after a jailbreak dispute forced it offline for most of June and unsettled developers who relied on it.
Regulators lifted the emergency export order behind that blackout, and Anthropic brought the model back on paid plans at half of each user's weekly usage limit. That reprieve came with a deadline.
After today, subscribers who keep using Fable 5 must move to metered credits that run $10 per million input tokens and $50 per million output, double what Opus 4.8 charges. The change makes it the priciest model Anthropic sells, and access stops once a subscriber's credits run out, with no automatic fallback.
The model also draws down plan allowances faster than Opus 4.8 does for the same work. Anthropic frames Fable 5 as a model for long-horizon work, and says its lead over Opus 4.8 widens only as tasks grow longer and more complex. For shorter jobs, the two sit much closer.
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Why Opus 4.8 Wins
Analysts argue that Opus 4.8 remains the sensible default for most everyday work, and that Fable 5 justifies its price only on long, autonomous jobs where cheaper models stall. One longtime columnist wrote that he will skip the upgrade for daily tasks and stay on the model he already pays for.
His main concern is reliability. Fable 5 quietly reroutes flagged prompts to Opus 4.8, so a user under deadline cannot always tell which model will answer a request.
Anthropic warns that even routine coding and debugging can trip its stricter new filter, though those reroutes are not billed at Fable's higher rate.
The same columnist raised two further doubts. He flagged Fable's shifting, undefined guardrails and its unproven speed, and he plans to wait a few stable months, the way he delays any fresh operating system, before trusting it with serious work.
Fable 5's first month set the tone for that caution.
Anthropic launched it on Jun. 9, then pulled it three days later after Amazon researchers flagged a method that slipped past its safeguards. The blackout hit every user because the export order barred foreign nationals, and Anthropic had no way to verify nationality in real time.
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