Discover what Claude Mythos is, how it compares to Opus, and why this leaked AI model matters for AI's future.

On March 27, 2026, Anthropic accidentally revealed the existence of Claude Mythos — a model the company describes as "larger and more intelligent than our Opus models." A misconfigured content management system exposed draft blog posts and nearly 3,000 unpublished assets, and two security researchers independently found the leak before Anthropic could pull it down. The company has since confirmed that Mythos is real, calling it "a step change" in AI capability and "the most capable we've built to date."
Here's everything we know so far.
Claude Mythos sits in a new tier Anthropic internally codenamed "Capybara." The name Mythos was chosen "to evoke the deep connective tissue that links together knowledge and ideas" — a nod to the model's ability to synthesize information across domains at a level Anthropic's previous models couldn't reach.
This isn't a simple upgrade from Opus 4.6 to Opus 5. It's a new class of model entirely. Think of it this way: Anthropic's current lineup runs from Haiku (smallest, fastest, cheapest) through Sonnet (balanced) to Opus (most capable). Mythos adds a fourth rung above Opus — bigger, smarter, and more resource-intensive.
Anthopic's leaked materials describe Mythos with phrases like "dramatically higher scores" compared to Claude Opus 4.6 across multiple benchmarks. While specific numbers haven't been published, here's what we know about where it pulls ahead:
| Capability | Opus 4.6 | Mythos |
|---|---|---|
| Software coding | Best-in-class among Claude models | Dramatically higher accuracy and debugging ability |
| Academic reasoning | Strong multi-step reasoning | Significantly improved on complex problems |
| Cybersecurity | Capable of vulnerability detection | "Far ahead of any other AI model" per Anthropic |
| Cost | Premium tier pricing | Significantly higher than Opus pricing |
| Availability | Generally available via API and Claude Pro | Early access only, limited customers |
For context, Claude Opus 4.6 was already considered one of the strongest coding and reasoning models available. Mythos apparently leapfrogs it by a wide margin.
The current Claude model hierarchy now looks like this:
The most striking claim in the leaked materials is about cybersecurity. Anthropic states that Mythos can "rapidly discover vulnerabilities in codebases" and warns that it "presages an upcoming wave of models that can exploit vulnerabilities in ways that far outpace the efforts of defenders."
That's a bold and concerning statement from the company that built the model. It suggests Mythos doesn't just find bugs — it can reason about how to exploit them at a speed and scale that human security teams can't match.
This dual-use nature is exactly why the rollout is so cautious. Anthropic is prioritizing access for cybersecurity defenders and organizations working on digital protection. The goal seems to be getting defensive capabilities into the right hands before the underlying techniques become more widely available.
Melanie Mitchell's Artificial Intelligence offers a clear-eyed look at how AI systems develop unexpected capabilities — a dynamic that feels very relevant here. Mitchell argues that current AI excels at specific tasks but often surprises us with what it can and can't do, and Mythos seems to be a textbook example of that pattern.

Anthopic hasn't published pricing, but the leaked blog drafts are unusually candid: "Mythos is also a large, compute-intensive model. It's very expensive for us to serve, and will be very expensive for our customers to use."
Given that Claude Opus 4.6 already sits at a premium tier, Mythos pricing will be significantly higher — though exact figures remain unknown until Anthropic makes an official announcement.
The rollout plan is deliberately phased:
Anthopic is also actively working to reduce inference costs before wider release, which suggests the company knows the current price point limits adoption.
Just months after Opus 4.6, Anthropic already has something substantially better. This pace of improvement is consistent with what Kai-Fu Lee describes in AI Superpowers — once AI development hits a critical mass of talent and compute, progress accelerates faster than most people expect. Lee's analysis of how AI competition drives rapid capability gains applies directly to what we're seeing with Mythos.

Anthopic's cautious rollout — prioritizing defensive cybersecurity users over general availability — reflects a growing industry consensus that the most powerful models need guardrails around distribution, not just alignment. OpenAI, Google DeepMind, and now Anthropic have all moved toward staged releases for their most capable systems.
The explicit acknowledgment that Mythos is expensive to serve is a reality check. The most capable models aren't useful if only a handful of organizations can afford them. This creates a tiered market where most developers use Sonnet or Haiku-class models for everyday work, while Opus and Mythos-class models get reserved for high-stakes applications.
Max Tegmark explores this kind of uneven AI access in Life 3.0, arguing that how we distribute powerful AI capabilities shapes whether the technology benefits everyone or concentrates advantage. Mythos is a live example of that tension.
For a quick audio deep-dive on how large language models work under the hood, listen to The Invisible Revolution Happening in Your Pocket — it covers the transformer architecture and statistical foundations that models like Mythos build on.
Based on what's been revealed, Mythos is likely best suited for:
Claude Mythos is the real deal — confirmed by Anthropic, accidentally revealed, and already in the hands of early testers. It represents a genuine capability jump above Opus 4.6, with particularly striking advances in cybersecurity and code analysis. The cautious rollout and high cost signal that Anthropic takes both the power and the risks of this model seriously.
We don't yet know exactly when Mythos will be broadly available or what it will cost. But its existence confirms that the frontier of AI capability is advancing faster than many expected, and the gap between the most powerful models and everyday tools is widening. For developers, security professionals, and anyone working with AI, Mythos is worth watching closely.