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AIAnthropic

Top engineers at Anthropic, OpenAI say AI now writes 100% of their code—with big implications for the future of software development jobs

By
Beatrice Nolan
Beatrice Nolan
Tech Reporter
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By
Beatrice Nolan
Beatrice Nolan
Tech Reporter
Down Arrow Button Icon
January 29, 2026, 2:47 PM ET
Claude 4 illustration
Anthropic's tools have become a favorite of software engineers over the last year, with Claude Code sparking a viral moment rarely seen since ChatGPT's debut.Photo by VCG/VCG via Getty Images

At Anthropic—an AI lab building some of the world’s most advanced models—engineers are no longer writing the code that powers their products; they’re outsourcing it to AI. The head of Anthropic’s Claude Code, Boris Cherny, has announced he hasn’t written any code in more than two months.

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In a post on X, Cherny said 100% of his code is now written by Anthropic’s Claude Code and Opus 4.5. Across the rest of the company, he says “pretty much 100%” of code is also AI-generated.

“For me personally, it has been 100% for two+ months now, I don’t even make small edits by hand,” Cherny wrote in a post on X responding to AI researcher Andrej Karpathy. “I shipped 22 PRs (pull requests) yesterday and 27 the day before, each one 100% written by Claude.”

The comments echo earlier remarks by Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei at the World Economic Forum earlier this month, where he noted that some engineers at his company have stopped writing code themselves and instead rely on AI models to generate it while they focus on editing. At Davos, Amodei predicted that the industry may be just six to twelve months away from AI handling most or all of software engineering work from start to finish.

Cherny isn’t the only prominent engineer to announce they have largely abandoned manual coding. Roon, a popular pseudonymous account on X written by an OpenAI researcher, also said in a post on X that he no longer writes any of his own code. “100%, I don’t write code anymore,” the user wrote when asked what percentage of his coding is done by AI models. In a separate post, he added: “Programming always sucked. It was a requisite pain for ~everyone who wanted to manipulate computers into doing useful things, and I’m glad it’s over.”

While those within the industry do have motivations to hype up their own tools, there is a growing consensus that the industry has already been fundamentally changed by the rise of AI coding tools.

“The whole way people build software has changed; software is not like what it used to be,” Himanshu Tyagi, co-founder of open-source AGI company Sentient, told Fortune. “A large part of the code that will be shipped over the next 10 years will be written by AI…[Anthropic’s] Claude Code is the breakthrough product that has made that happen.”

Still, outside the leading AI labs, the figures for AI-generated code reported by many software companies is significantly lower. For instance, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella said in April 2025 that AI was generating about 30% of code at the software giant. Salesforce has given out a similar figure. A study published in the journal Science earlier this month looked at GitHub Python functions and found that about 29% in the U.S. are now AI-written, with lower percentages in other geographies.

And while Cherny says that AI now writes 100% of his code, an Anthropic spokesperson said that company-wide the figure is between 70% and 90%. For Claude Code, about 90% of its code is written by Claude Code itself.

Cherny, for one, believes these figures will continue to climb though, and that other companies will start to get to similar levels of AI code generation soon. “I think most of the industry will see similar stats in the coming months—it will take more time for some vs others,” he wrote. “We will then start seeing similar stats for non-coding computer work also.”

Anthropic’s tools have become a favorite of software engineers over the last few years. But the release of Claude Code has resonated with both coders and non-coders and sparked a viral moment for the company that hasn’t been seen since ChatGPT’s debut. After users pointed out that Claude Code was more of a general-purpose AI agent, Anthropic created a version of the product for non-coders, launching Cowork, a file management agent that is essentially a user-friendly version of the coding product. Cherny said his team built Cowork in approximately a week and a half, largely using Claude Code itself.

Even before the public frenzy, Cherny says the tool was making waves within their own company.

“Somewhere around a year ago…we had this idea that the model was powerful enough that we could use it for a different kind of coding…we started to try out internally, and it just immediately took off,” Cherny told Fortune in an interview last week. “I have never had this much joy day to day in my work, as I do right now, because essentially all the tedious work, Claude does it, and I get to be creative. I get to think about what I want to build next.”

Cherny said he also uses Claude Code for various admin aspects outside of coding, including project management tasks like automatically messaging team members on Slack when they haven’t updated shared spreadsheets.

“Engineers just feel unshackled, that they don’t have to work on all the tedious stuff anymore,” he said.

A reckoning for the software industry

The rise of AI-generated code has significantly impacted the software industry. Many Big Tech companies have been open about the fact that AI models are writing significant amounts of their code. But the automation of much of the coding process has also raised questions about the future of software engineering roles, particularly entry-level positions that have traditionally served as training grounds for the profession.

Tech companies argue that rapid adoption of AI coding tools like Claude Code and GitHub Copilot will democratize coding, allowing those with little to no technical skills to build products by prompting AI systems in natural language. But, while it’s not definitive that the two are causally linked—and there are other factors impacting a job’s downturn—open roles for entry-level software engineers have indeed declined as the amount of code written by generative AI has ramped up.

The shift is already changing how Anthropic approaches hiring. Cherny said his team now hires mostly generalists rather than specialists, since many traditional programming skills are less relevant when AI handles implementation details.

“Not all of the things people learned in the past translate to coding with LLMs,” Cherny wrote. “The model can fill in the details.”

While Cherny emphasized the productivity gains and creative freedom that AI coding tools provide, he also acknowledged that the technology is still developing. According to Karpathy’s assessment, models can make “subtle conceptual errors,” over-complicate code, and leave dead code around. Despite the limitations, engineers like Cherny are confident that AI-generated code quality will only continue to improve.

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About the Author
By Beatrice NolanTech Reporter
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Beatrice Nolan is a tech reporter on Fortune’s AI team, covering artificial intelligence and emerging technologies and their impact on work, industry, and culture. She's based in Fortune's London office and holds a bachelor’s degree in English from the University of York. You can reach her securely via Signal at beatricenolan.08

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