
"I was merely going to ask: 'Will Claude Sonnet 5 be released? Should I refrain from changing my usual training method for now?'" ’
Upon checking the results, one would find themselves falling into the rabbit hole of rumors: "It will come out today! It will come out tomorrow! It will definitely come out the day after tomorrow!" …… I've refreshed the Anthropic website so many times that it was enough to calm me down and get me to think rationally.
I'm Anna. I decided to write this "Rational Self-Support Guide" to help everyone (and myself too) distinguish between the real signals and the collective hallucinations - so that you can make an informed decision: whether to stick with the old version or wait patiently."

There isn't an official, confirmed release date for "Claude Sonnet 5" right now. If you're looking for a crisp day on the calendar, it doesn't exist publicly.
What I can say with confidence: Anthropic tends to announce major model iterations on its official properties first, their blog, docs, and (sometimes simultaneously) API availability. When it's real, it shows up there.
If you like a window instead of a date, the only honest frame is this: watch for a short, noisy ramp-up (developer docs nudges, partner mentions, benchmark charts), followed by a same‑day blog post and API switch‑on. That's been the pattern for significant releases in 2024 (for example, Claude 3.5 Sonnet arrived with a same‑day blog post and immediate availability). Until those signals appear together, I'd assume "not yet."
I don't chase every breadcrumb anymore. I pay attention to a few concrete things that have actually predicted real releases for Anthropic‑style launches. In rough order:

If all you want is a yes/no: the day you see a blog post plus a docs update plus model availability in API, you can stop checking. That's the release day for real‑world purposes.

A few things I consider solid vs. squishy:
Credible:
Not enough on its own:
Why this matters in practice: if you're deciding whether to re‑prompt, migrate notes, or retrain a small workflow, you need confidence the model exists and will stick. Half‑announcements can waste an afternoon re‑wiring prompts that you'll re‑wire again in a week.
Even when a release feels imminent, a few things can push dates around:
If your use is lightweight, habit nudges, planning a mini‑project, journaling aids, I'd wait for three things before switching: a stable model ID, predictable latency, and no surprise throttling during your usual hours. Two out of three is how prompts get lost.

By the way, our Macaron can help you transform this "pre-model-switching checklist" into a repeatable small tool or process, allowing you to quickly verify the key signals every time you migrate, update, or test a new model.
You can try using Macaron to organize your release judgment steps, ensuring that you won't waste time or lose progress due to scattered information.