
How long is Anthropic’s lease with SpaceX? Opinions vary.
Quick Answer
Elon Musk is framing Anthropic's compute deal with SpaceX as a short-term arrangement, despite SpaceX's S-1 filing indicating payments are set to continue through May 2029.
Quick Take
Elon Musk is framing Anthropic's compute deal with SpaceX as a short-term arrangement, despite SpaceX's S-1 filing indicating payments are set to continue through May 2029. This discrepancy raises questions about the stability and longevity of the partnership between Anthropic and SpaceX.
Key Points
- Elon Musk suggests Anthropic's deal is cancellable and short-term.
- SpaceX's S-1 filing states payments extend through May 2029.
- Discrepancy highlights potential instability in the partnership.
- Anthropic relies on SpaceX for significant computational resources.
- The situation reflects broader uncertainties in AI and space collaborations.
📖 Reader Mode
~3 min readEarlier this month, xAI signed a major compute deal with Anthropic, pledging billions of dollars a month for exclusive use of the company’s Colossus cluster. It was a coup for both companies, giving xAI some much-needed revenue and helping Anthropic catch up in the never-ending race for compute.
But this morning on X, Elon Musk downplayed exactly how much SpaceX had committed to the deal.
“SpaceX has not committed to leasing Colossus for years, although it’s possible that may be what happens,” he said, replying to a user. “This is a 180 day lease with 90 day notice mutual cancellation thereafter. The short term was our request, not Anthropic’s. We won’t leave them hanging and will provide a reasonable off-ramp, but if compute gets super tight I said we might need it back at some point.”
Musk’s statement directly contradicts SpaceX’s recent S-1 filing, which confirms the standard 90-day cancellation but presents the deal as a three-year agreement. Page F-62 of the filing reads:
On May 3, 2026, the Company entered into a cloud services agreement with Anthropic PBC, an AI research and development public benefit corporation, with respect to access to compute capacity. Pursuant to this agreement, the customer has agreed to pay a monthly fee through May 2029, with capacity ramping in May 2026 at a reduced fee. The agreement may be terminated by either party upon 90 days’ notice. The customer will retain ownership and intellectual property rights in its content, AI models, and related data.
The key point here is that Anthropic “has agreed to pay a monthly fee through May 2029” — a pretty straightforward description of a three-year lease. The same language is repeated on F-96 and in slightly varied form (“the customer has agreed to pay us $1.25 billion per month through May 2029”) on pages 13 and 146, so it’s not as if there was a typo.
xAI did not respond to a request for clarification.
Maybe we can quibble about whether Anthropic agreeing to pay for a service means the same thing as SpaceX agreeing to provide that service, but that’s not usually what “lease” means. And why have a one-way lock-in if either party can terminate the deal with three months’ notice anyway?
I don’t have the deal in front of me, so I don’t know what it says — and neither SpaceX nor Anthropic is saying anything about the duration of the deal in their announcements. Still, there should be a pretty straightforward fact of the matter here, and it’s not the sort of thing you want to make false statements about during a company’s quiet period.
As always, we should note that the SEC probably will not do anything — and even if they did, Elon probably wouldn’t care. But this sort of does seem like a material misrepresentation made while marketing a security, which is bad karma at the very least.
Sean O’Kane contributed reporting to this article.
When you purchase through links in our articles, we may earn a small commission. This doesn’t affect our editorial independence.
Russell Brandom has been covering the tech industry since 2012, with a focus on platform policy and emerging technologies. He previously worked at The Verge and Rest of World, and has written for Wired, The Awl and MIT’s Technology Review. He can be reached at russell.brandom@techcrunch.com or on Signal at 412-401-5489.
— Originally published at techcrunch.com
Want this in your inbox every morning?
Daily brief at your local 8am — bilingual EN/中文, free.
More from TechCrunch
See more →
OpenAI launches its new family of models with GPT-5.6
OpenAI has launched GPT-5.6, featuring three models: Sol, Terra, and Luna, with Sol being 54% more token efficient for coding tasks. The models excel in cybersecurity and enterprise applications, outperforming competitors like Anthropic's Fable in benchmarks. Pricing starts at $1 for Luna and goes up to $30 for Sol per million tokens.

