DXC and Anthropic launch enterprise Claude rollout for insurers
DXC is pushing Claude into insurer workflows, backed by OASIS, 50-plus customers and a new army of certified engineers. The bet is production-grade AI, not demos.

DXC Technology and Anthropic are trying to make Claude feel less like a chatbot and more like a piece of enterprise plumbing for insurers. Their June 11 alliance put insurance at the front of a four-industry rollout that also includes banking, airlines and manufacturing, with DXC saying Claude will help deliver agentic solutions and modernize core systems around each customer’s business context, operating model and strategic needs.
For P&C carriers, that framing matters more than the model name. The hard part is not proving a large language model can answer questions; it is proving it can sit inside regulated workflows with security controls, legacy-system connectivity, audit trails and the discipline insurers need around human review and exception handling. DXC is positioning the deal around that reality, not around a standalone product demo.

The company also pointed to its own internal use as part of the sales pitch. DXC said Claude is already powering DXC OASIS, its AI-native orchestration platform for managed services, and that OASIS is in production with more than 50 joint customers. DXC introduced OASIS on April 28, 2026 as an intelligent orchestration layer designed to integrate across existing IT environments and actively manage organizations’ IT estates in real time. For insurers that still run core policy, claims and billing systems built across multiple generations of technology, that emphasis on integration is the point.
The alliance is also a staffing play. DXC said it will train tens of thousands of Claude-certified forward-deployed engineers and builders who will work inside customer environments, while Anthropic said DXC will add its own curriculum on top of Anthropic Academy for mission-critical systems training. DXC said it has more than 115,000 employees across 70 countries, and that scale gives the company a built-in delivery footprint if it can turn those engineers into a repeatable deployment force rather than a one-off consulting bench.
DXC said it is already a Global Premier partner in the Claude Partner Network, and the companies said the broader goal is to create domain-specific AI offerings for insurance, cybersecurity and application services. That makes the alliance less about a single launch and more about whether DXC can industrialize Claude for heavily regulated insurance environments. The measure of success will not be a polished demo, but whether the software lands in production, fits insurer workflows and holds up under the rules that govern them.
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