Anthropic Releases Claude Fable 5 as Its First Public Mythos-Class Model
Anthropic has released Claude Fable 5, its first generally available Mythos-class AI model, with built-in safeguards that route some high-risk requests to Claude Opus 4.8 instead.
The company announced Claude Fable 5 and Claude Mythos 5 on June 9, 2026. Fable 5 is based on the same underlying model as Mythos 5, but Anthropic added restrictions for areas such as cybersecurity, biology, chemistry, and model distillation.
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Anthropic says Fable 5 sits above the Opus line in capability and is built for long, complex work. The release also brings new debate over how AI companies should balance powerful public models, safety controls, transparency, and enterprise data policies.
Claude Fable 5 brings Mythos-level capabilities to more users
On the official Claude Fable 5 page, Anthropic describes the model as designed for ambitious, long-running projects, including multi-stage coding tasks, enterprise workflows, document-heavy analysis, and vision work.
The company says Fable 5 is its most capable generally available model and performs strongly on coding, knowledge work, vision, and computer-use tasks. Anthropic says the model can also work in agent harnesses such as Claude Code or Claude Managed Agents for extended projects.
Pricing starts at $10 per million input tokens and $50 per million output tokens. Anthropic also says Fable 5 is available through the Claude API, consumption-based Enterprise plans, supported marketplaces, Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud, and Microsoft Foundry.
| Model | Claude Fable 5 |
| Model tier | Mythos class |
| Availability | Generally available, with staged subscription access |
| Best use cases | Long coding projects, agentic work, analytics, knowledge work, and vision tasks |
| Input price | $10 per million tokens |
| Output price | $50 per million tokens |
| Safety fallback | Some sensitive requests route to Claude Opus 4.8 |
| Data retention | 30 days for Mythos-class traffic used for safety monitoring |
Why Anthropic added safeguards to Fable 5
Anthropic says Mythos-class models are powerful enough to create new risks in dual-use areas. The company says the same capabilities that can help defenders find security flaws could also help malicious users with offensive cyber tasks.
The Claude Mythos 5 page says Mythos 5 is available only to a small set of initial testing partners for cybersecurity, with biology research access planned through trusted programs.
Fable 5 is the broader public version of that capability. When its classifiers detect requests related to cybersecurity, biology and chemistry, or distillation, the response is handled by Claude Opus 4.8 instead of the full Fable model.
- Cybersecurity safeguards cover exploitation and broader offensive cyber tasks.
- Biology and chemistry safeguards are tuned broadly to reduce misuse risk.
- Distillation safeguards target attempts to use Fable 5 to train competing models.
- Anthropic says most sessions do not trigger fallback.
- Users are supposed to be informed when fallback occurs.
Claude Mythos 5 remains restricted to trusted users
Anthropic is also launching Claude Mythos 5 for a restricted group of cyber defenders and infrastructure providers. It uses the same underlying model as Fable 5, but with safeguards lifted in selected areas for approved users.
The company says Mythos 5 will initially be deployed through Project Glasswing, a program created to give selected cybersecurity partners access to advanced models for defensive work.
Anthropic says it plans to expand trusted access over time. It also says a future biology access program will let selected researchers use Mythos-class capabilities with biology and chemistry safeguards removed, while keeping cyber safeguards in place.
| Feature | Claude Fable 5 | Claude Mythos 5 |
| Underlying model | Same base model | Same base model |
| Access | Broadly available | Restricted trusted access |
| Cyber safeguards | Enabled | Lifted for approved cyber partners |
| Biology and chemistry safeguards | Enabled | Planned removal for selected biology researchers |
| Primary audience | Developers, enterprises, analysts, and general advanced users | Cyber defenders, infrastructure providers, and approved researchers |
Fable 5 uses Opus 4.8 fallback for sensitive prompts
Anthropic says its safeguards trigger in less than 5% of sessions on average. For the remaining sessions, Fable 5 should deliver the same performance as Mythos 5.
According to TechCrunch, Anthropic said Fable 5 falls back to Claude Opus 4.8 in high-risk areas such as cybersecurity, biology, chemistry, and distillation, while still giving users access to Mythos-level capabilities for most other work.
This approach is meant to avoid a full refusal when a safer model can answer. However, it also means some users may not always receive a response from the model they selected, especially when working near sensitive topics.
The launch sparked concern over transparency
After launch, Anthropic faced criticism over a safeguard for AI development and distillation-related prompts that could change or degrade responses without clearly telling users. That led to concerns from developers and AI researchers.
The Verge reported that Anthropic apologized for the invisible guardrail approach and said it would make the safeguard visible, with flagged requests falling back to Claude Opus 4.8 and users being notified.
The change matters because Fable 5 is aimed at serious technical work. Researchers and developers need to know when a model’s answer reflects the selected model and when a safety layer has changed the response path.
- Anthropic initially used invisible safeguards for some distillation-related cases.
- Developers criticized the lack of user visibility.
- Anthropic said it made the wrong tradeoff.
- The company moved toward visible fallback to Opus 4.8.
- The issue highlights growing tension between AI safety and model transparency.
Data retention becomes part of the safety tradeoff
Anthropic is requiring 30-day data retention for Fable 5, Mythos 5, and future models with similar or higher capability levels. The company says it will use the retained data for safety monitoring, not to train new Claude models.
The Anthropic launch post says the retained traffic helps detect complex attacks, novel jailbreaks, multi-request abuse, and false positives in safeguards.
That policy may create friction for enterprises that prefer zero-retention arrangements. It also explains why Fable 5 is likely to receive closer review from legal, security, and compliance teams before broad internal deployment.
Project Glasswing shaped the Mythos release
Anthropic first introduced Mythos-class access through Project Glasswing, which focuses on helping cyber defenders use advanced AI to secure important software and infrastructure.
The company says Mythos Preview showed how advanced models can help defenders find and fix vulnerabilities. At the same time, Anthropic warned that similar capabilities could make cyberattacks cheaper and more frequent if released without safeguards.
Fable 5 reflects that compromise. Anthropic is releasing more capability to the public while keeping the highest-risk cyber and biology use cases behind fallback systems or trusted access programs.
What users can do with Claude Fable 5
For most users, Fable 5 is positioned as a high-end model for long and difficult tasks rather than quick everyday chat. Anthropic highlights coding, code migration, research, analytics, document work, visual reasoning, and agentic workflows.
The Fable product page says the model can plan across stages, delegate to sub-agents, test its own work, and evaluate visual output against a target design or goal.
That makes it most relevant for teams that need help with complex software projects, deep analysis, legal and finance workflows, product prototypes, and other tasks where a cheaper model may need too much supervision.
| Use case | Why Fable 5 may help |
| Large code migrations | Can work across long, multi-step engineering tasks |
| Agentic coding | Can plan, test, and revise work over longer sessions |
| Enterprise analysis | Can process complex documents, tables, charts, and files |
| Vision tasks | Can interpret diagrams, screenshots, charts, and nested visual content |
| Research workflows | Can help with long-form reasoning and structured synthesis |
What to watch next
The biggest questions now concern reliability, cost, and trust. Fable 5 is more expensive than lower-tier Claude models, and its safety fallback can affect sensitive technical or scientific workflows.
The Mythos page shows that Anthropic sees these models as powerful enough to require trusted access programs for some capabilities. That approach may influence how other AI companies release frontier models.
TechCrunch also noted that Anthropic’s mandatory 30-day retention policy could become a new industry precedent for very capable models, especially when companies frame monitoring as a safety requirement.
For now, Claude Fable 5 gives public users access to a more capable Claude model, but not without limits. The launch shows how the next generation of AI products may come with more power, higher prices, stronger safeguards, and more visible debate over who gets unrestricted access.
The latest criticism covered by The Verge also shows that users expect transparency when model behavior changes because of hidden or visible safety systems. Anthropic’s response may shape how future frontier AI launches explain safeguards from day one.
FAQ
Claude Fable 5 is Anthropic’s first generally available Mythos-class AI model. It is built for long, complex tasks such as coding, analytics, document work, vision, and agentic workflows, but it includes safeguards for high-risk areas.
Claude Fable 5 and Claude Mythos 5 use the same underlying model. The difference is access and safeguards. Fable 5 is broadly available with restrictions, while Mythos 5 is restricted to approved partners with some safeguards lifted for trusted use cases.
Anthropic says Fable 5 falls back to Claude Opus 4.8 when classifiers detect requests related to high-risk areas such as cybersecurity, biology and chemistry, or model distillation. The company says this reduces misuse risk while keeping Fable 5 available for most other work.
Claude Fable 5 costs $10 per million input tokens and $50 per million output tokens. Anthropic also offers a 90% input token discount for prompt caching where applicable.
Yes. Anthropic requires 30-day data retention for Fable 5, Mythos 5, and future models with similar or higher capability levels. The company says it uses the data for safety monitoring and not for training new Claude models.
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