The U.S.-based AI lab is currently hiring for 13 roles in its compute department — which focuses on developing and managing AI data centres — of which eight are based in Australia or Japan.
In Japan, the company is hiring for two roles: sourcing data center deals and a data center electrical engineer. Six open Australia-based roles all focus on data center engineers and operators. In April, Anthropic was also hiring for a data center deal sourcing role in the country.
Anthropic, the world’s most valuable private company, announced a slew of U.S.-based data center deals in the spring, and was hiring a role for negotiating compute capacity in Europe in April.
It’s increasingly looking to overseas expansion as usage of its enterprise and consumer products has gained momentum in recent months.
“Growth at this pace places an inevitable strain on our infrastructure; our unprecedented consumer growth, in particular, has impacted reliability and performance,” the company said in an April blog post.
‘Abundant energy’
The AI lab raised $65 billion in May at a $965 billion valuation. Its revenue run-rate crossed $47 billion that month, multiple times higher than the “around $9 billion” Anthropic said the figure stood at at the end of 2025.
As part of its race to build out compute capacity, a listing for a data center energy role in Australia specifically mentions the company’s “rapidly expanding AI compute footprint across the region” and talks of leading “multi-hundred megawatt procurement efforts.”
The country also has “distance from military threats, which have proved such a vulnerability for the Gulf states,” he told CNBC. Conflict in the Middle East has tested the region’s credentials as a secure place to build AI infrastructure, with two Amazon data centers targeted early in the war.
Australia’s involvement in the Five Eyes intelligence sharing partnership with the U.S. also means that the country is viewed as a safe destination for compute, even as models become more powerful and sensitive as national security assets, Wroe added.
But the “main obstacle” to a large-scale AI infrastructure buildout in Australia are copyright laws “which put an AI company at risk of being sued by rights holders,” Wroe said. Some politicians in Australia are campaigning against copyright carve-outs for AI companies looking to use content to train commercial products.
The hunt for power
Anthropic pointed CNBC towards comments it made in May, where the company said it would be expanding capacity internationally.
“We’re very intentional about where we’ll add capacity—partnering with democratic countries whose legal and regulatory frameworks support investments of this scale, and where the supply chain on which our compute depends—hardware, networking, and facilities—will be secure,” Anthropic said in a blog post.
While roles in Australia and Japan don’t feature salary bands, a London-based data center deal sourcing role for Europe, which the company was hiring for in April, was offering a salary of between £225,000 and £270,000 ($296,854-$355,253).
Engineering and technical roles in data centers are particularly in demand due to a labour shortage, with salaries for these roles on the rise.

Japan has evolving grid infrastructure and significant government interest in domestic AI infrastructure, according to the Anthropic job advert. The U.S. AI lab isn’t the only company to show interest in investing in the region.
In April Microsoft announced a $10 billion investment into Japan, which will include developing AI infrastructure, and GMI Cloud announced a $12 billion sovereign AI project in March.
“Japan is a particularly appealing place to invest in Asia because of its political stability, reliable power grid, highly developed Internet and subsea cable infrastructure and technically skilled workforce,” said Aalok Mehta, director of the Wadhwani AI Center at think tank the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
“In many ways that reflects factors that are driving so much data center investment in the United States.”
AI infrastructure builds in Japan still faces critical challenges when it comes to access to energy, as with projects across the globe.
For many data center developers across Asia-Pacific, “securing power is becoming more challenging than securing land, financing or permits,” said Xiaonan Feng, principal analyst of APAC power and renewables at Wood Mackenzie. “Grid availability is emerging as the defining constraint on data centre growth.”