Xero Limited Bets on Anthropic to Put Claude AI Inside Small-Business Finance

Xero Limited Bets on Anthropic to Put Claude AI Inside Small-Business Finance

March 29, 2026

Wellington, March 29, 2026, 08:08 NZDT

  • Xero plans to integrate Claude directly into its own platform, and users will also be able to tap Xero’s data and tools from within Claude.ai.
  • Xero plans to launch in the next few months, stepping up its U.S. payments drive following Melio.
  • Xero closed out Friday at A$72.84, rising 0.6%.

Xero on Thursday announced a multi-year deal with Anthropic, planning to weave Claude into its accounting platform and allow users to tap Xero data directly within Claude.ai. The move is set to deepen the company’s AI offerings for small business clients. Fresh tools from the partnership are expected to roll out in the coming months.

Timing has played a big role here. Earlier this year, Anthropic’s latest product launches sent software stocks tumbling, investors concerned that AI would eat into legacy software firms’ business. Sentiment calmed somewhat after Anthropic lined up partnerships with established players.

Xero is zeroing in on its ambition to build out a more comprehensive finance platform. Just six days before, it rolled out online bill payments in the U.S., tapping into Melio technology—a move following its Melio acquisition back in October 2025. Xero says its new product aims directly at the $29 billion U.S. small-business payments market.

The deal puts Claude to work for Xero users, letting them manage accounting, payroll, and payments all within the platform. On the flip side, Claude.ai will pull in Xero’s financial data and tools for things like analysis and planning. Xero stressed that any data moving between the services is kept session-only and won’t end up training Claude’s AI.

Small business owners and their advisers are seeking instant insights into cash flow, overdue invoices, and staffing decisions, no matter if they’re logged into Xero or Claude, Xero’s chief product and technology officer Diya Jolly said.

Chris Ciauri at Anthropic called Claude a “reasoning layer” for a platform that’s already woven into millions of businesses. Xero, for its part, said it plans to tap Claude and Cowork—Anthropic’s developer toolkit—to help its engineers move faster on internal product work. Xero

This ups the ante against Intuit’s QuickBooks and Sage, both of which already pitch AI features for automated bookkeeping, issue detection, and financial insights right in their platforms. Xero has been heading in that direction too, bringing AI-driven analytics to users worldwide in January.

Xero counts 4.6 million subscribers globally, with first-half revenue climbing 20% from a year earlier to hit NZ$1.2 billion. The company will release full-year results on May 14—offering investors their next look at progress on the U.S. payments initiative and the wider AI rollout.

The payoff stays out of reach for now. Claude’s new features aren’t landing until the next few months, so Xero has to show that small firms will actually move more routine finance tasks into AI-powered flows—despite the fact that data only gets processed within each session.

Xero closed out Friday at A$72.84, gaining 0.6% following news of the partnership. That modest uptick hints investors welcomed the deal as a positive nod to AI ambitions, though it’s hardly the breakthrough that resolves bigger doubts on adoption, execution, or payoff.

Marcin Frąckiewicz

Marcin Frąckiewicz is the CEO of TS2 Space and a longtime technology entrepreneur focused on telecommunications, satellite communications and digital innovation. A graduate of the Warsaw School of Economics (SGH), he writes about space technology, artificial intelligence and publicly traded technology companies. His analysis covers major market trends, emerging technologies and the businesses shaping the future of the global economy.

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