OpenAI is mulling drastic price cuts on the tokens it charges developers and businesses, a move aimed squarely at clawing back users from Anthropic. The Wall Street Journal reported on June 10, 2026, that discussions are ongoing but haven’t reached a final decision.

Anthropic has been on a tear. The company closed a $65 billion funding round in late May 2026, pushing its valuation to roughly $900 billion to $965 billion. OpenAI, which spent years as the undisputed leader in generative AI, now finds itself in an unfamiliar position: chasing. Anthropic has outpaced it in recent fundraising, and the gap in perceived momentum has clearly rattled the Sam Altman-led company enough to consider sacrificing margin for market share.

Both companies are preparing for IPOs in 2026. That timing makes this pricing debate especially consequential. Potential public market investors will be scrutinizing two things above all else: how many users each platform retains, and whether their unit economics can survive a sustained price war.

The entire AI industry has been experiencing a steady decline in API and token pricing over recent months. Smaller competitors and open-source alternatives have flooded the market, applying downward pressure on what the big players can charge.