The protocol number matters more than the product announcement.
Anthropic confirmed that MCP has reached 97 million monthly SDK downloads across Python and TypeScript, the company’s official figure, verified directly from Anthropic’s announcement page. Anthropic reports more than 16,000 active MCP servers, covering developer tools through Fortune 500 deployments, though that specific figure is directionally supported rather than independently audited. Together, these numbers tell a single story: MCP has won the protocol standardization race for agentic tool-use. The question now is what gets built on top of it.
Claude for Legal is the first answer at enterprise scale. The product reached general availability on May 15, configured from the Claude 4 family for legal workflow execution. Per Anthropic’s sources, it integrates with legal tools through MCP connectors and is aimed at enterprise legal teams, law firms, and contract lifecycle operations. Observers have characterized Claude for Legal as an “execution layer”, a system that acts, not just recommends, a distinction Anthropic’s technical webinar appeared to reinforce, though that framing is observer characterization rather than an Anthropic quote. Importantly, this is a distinct product from last week’s Claude for Small Business launch, which covered the enterprise AI spend trajectory Anthropic is pursuing. The Small Business product shipped MCP connectors for DocuSign and LexisNexis. The Legal product targets enterprise-tier law firms and legal operations teams with execution-layer capabilities, different buyer, different stakes.
Pricing structure reportedly includes separate programmatic use budgets billed at full API rates for enterprise subscribers, per a since-broken source. The “reportedly” qualifier applies here. Don’t build a budget model around that figure until a working source confirms it.
The part nobody mentions in enterprise legal AI coverage: MCP’s 16,000-server ecosystem means the integration surface is already substantial, but most of those servers are developer tools. The legal-specific MCP server ecosystem is far smaller. Claude for Legal’s practical integration breadth at launch depends on which legal workflow tools have already built MCP connectors, and that’s a due diligence question every legal operations team needs to ask before a deployment decision.
Legal teams evaluating this should also check the governance coverage in why agentic AI is harder to certify under the EU AI Act, because “execution layer” AI in legal contexts carries attorney-client privilege implications, data handling requirements, and professional liability questions that general AI deployment frameworks don’t fully address.
What to watch
Microsoft Legal Agent for Word is the direct competitive reference point, its enterprise GA on May 5 (per registry coverage) means Anthropic and Microsoft are racing the same legal operations buyer in the same procurement window. Claude for Legal’s MCP-native architecture is a real differentiator if legal tool vendors have built the connectors. If they haven’t, the execution-layer promise runs ahead of the integration reality.
The MCP 97M downloads figure is the most consequential number in this announcement. Not because it validates Claude for Legal specifically, but because it confirms that Anthropic’s protocol bet has already been won at the infrastructure layer. Every enterprise vertical product Anthropic ships from here inherits that foundation.