As of June 23, 2026, Claude Fable 5 is no longer free on Pro, Max, Team, or Enterprise subscriptions. Continued access now requires prepaid usage credits — billed at $10 per million input tokens and $50 per million output. That’s double the price of Claude Opus 4.8, making Fable 5 the most expensive generally available frontier model on the market today.

What Changed Today — The Real Pricing Numbers

Anthropic set the deadline when Fable 5 launched on June 9: free access for paid subscribers would last through June 22. That date has passed.

At $50 per million output tokens, Fable 5 costs roughly 67 percent more than OpenAI’s GPT-5 Pro (~$30/M output) and exactly double Opus 4.8’s $25/M output rate. For a heavy user generating 500,000 output tokens per month — around 30 to 40 long research sessions — that’s an extra $25 layered on top of the existing subscription. During the free window, Fable 5 already burned through plan allowances at double the rate of Opus. The paywall just makes that cost explicit.

Developers on pay-as-you-go API billing see no change — Fable 5 has always been billed at token rates through the API. Today’s shift only affects subscription-tier users.

Subscribers Got a Week, Not Two — Here’s Why

If you’re on Pro ($20/month), Max ($100/month), Team, or seat-based Enterprise, Fable 5 now draws from your prepaid credit balance. Exhaust those credits and Claude falls back to Opus 4.8, which remains fully included in every plan.

The timing stings. The US export control directive that blocked Fable 5 from approximately June 12 to June 18 wiped out six of the 13-day free window. Subscribers who expected a fortnight of evaluation time got roughly a week. Anthropic has acknowledged the outage but has not offered any credit extension or compensation for the lost access period. When Fable 5 first launched, the June 22 deadline was framed as generous runway for subscribers to test the model. It turned out to be significantly shorter than advertised.

Anthropic’s Promise: Free Again — Eventually

Anthropic says it intends to restore Fable 5 as a standard subscription feature “when sufficient capacity allows” — but no timeline is attached to that commitment. The practical split, for now: Opus 4.8 is the included workhorse, and Fable 5 is a pay-as-you-go specialist model.

The competitive backdrop matters here. OpenAI’s recent price cuts have made the premium AI market more price-sensitive than ever. Anthropic’s decision to tier Fable 5 separately looks like a deliberate strategy to protect margins on flagship compute while keeping subscription pricing competitive for everyday use. Whether subscribers see it that way is another question.

For most everyday writing, coding, and analysis tasks, Opus 4.8 is the right default in 2026. Save Fable 5 credits for the complex, multi-step reasoning work that genuinely requires it — not every conversation needs a $50/M model.

💡 Our Take: Anthropic had a reasonable case for moving Fable 5 behind a paywall — frontier compute has real costs, and unlimited access at $20/month was never sustainable. But rolling out the paywall the day after an export ban erased nearly half the free trial is a poor look. Subscribers who couldn’t even test the model are now being asked to buy credits for it. A 7-day grace extension would have cost Anthropic almost nothing and preserved a lot of goodwill. Instead, the first post-ban message to users is: pay up.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Claude Pro still work without Fable 5 credits?

Yes — Claude Pro and Max continue to work normally. Without Fable 5 credits, your sessions run on Opus 4.8, which is fully included at no extra cost.

How much will Fable 5 cost a typical Claude Pro user per month?

It depends on usage intensity. A user generating roughly 500,000 output tokens monthly can expect to pay approximately $25 in usage credits — on top of their $20 Pro subscription.

Will Fable 5 come back free to subscribers?

Anthropic says yes, but gives no date. Based on the company’s past capacity constraints with Opus 4.8, a multi-month wait is the realistic expectation.

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