Drive Claude Code across every machine on your team — queued, reviewed, and merged with full project context.
Claude Code autonomously explores, edits, and tests your codebase with full project context.
Connect macOS, Windows, or Linux machines and dispatch Claude Code work from chat, kanban, or the API.
AI Expedite layers code review, UI tests, and changelog generation on top of every Claude Code run.
Claude Code is exceptional at writing software once it has the right context, but every team that adopts it hits the same scaling wall: someone has to babysit each session, decide what to dispatch next, and stitch the outputs back together. AI Expedite is the orchestration layer that runs on top — turning a single CLI into a coordinated fleet that the whole team can drive.
Most engineering teams adopt Claude Code one developer at a time. AI Expedite changes the unit of work from 'one engineer running one Claude Code session' to 'a queued, prioritized backlog of work that any agent on any machine can pick up.' A product manager can drop a feature request into chat, the system breaks it into requirements and a design, the design becomes an implementation plan, and Claude Code picks up the plan on the next available machine with the right subscription attached. The engineer keeps their IDE for review and the hard cases, and frees up the long tail of plumbing, refactors, and tests for the agent fleet.
We connect to your Claude Code CLI through a small terminal app you install on the machines that will run agent work. The terminal app is code-signed, restricted to an allowlist of commands by default, and prompts you in the OS for anything it has not been pre-approved to run. Coordination happens in the cloud: AI Expedite maintains a queue of feature work, assigns each task to a free machine that has Claude Code authenticated, and streams results back into the workspace. Multiple machines can run in parallel without stepping on each other — each takes its own branch, its own working copy, and its own merge slot.
Every Claude Code session ends with an AI code review pass on the resulting diff, automated UI tests when the change touches a screen, and a generated changelog entry. The reviewer flags regressions, missing tests, and patterns that diverge from your codebase before the PR lands in front of a human. If a build or test fails, the system feeds the failure back into the agent so it can fix forward without the engineer having to copy-paste a stack trace.
Because AI Expedite runs Claude Code through your own subscription, the marginal cost of an additional feature is usually a few cents of orchestration overhead rather than the model token cost. Teams that already pay for Claude Pro or Max can run dozens of features a week through agents without a separate enterprise contract. The platform credits cover orchestration, planning, review, and validation — the heavy model work runs on the subscription you already have.
No. AI Expedite orchestrates Claude Code through the CLI that's already authenticated on your machine, using your existing Claude Pro, Max, or Team subscription. We never see or proxy your Anthropic credentials.
Yes. Each machine you connect via the terminal app becomes a worker the orchestrator can dispatch to. The system distributes queued work across available machines and never assigns two agents the same branch at the same time.
Sessions surface in the workspace with their current state. You can step in and chat directly with the running session, unblock it with a hint, or hand the task back to the queue. Failed runs include the full transcript so you can debug or re-dispatch with adjusted scope.
Yes. The orchestration layer is CLI-agnostic — Claude Code, Codex, and other agentic coding tools coexist on the same machine, and you can route specific feature types or repos to whichever performs best for them.
CI is great for executing a known job, but Claude Code's value is in exploration and feature-level reasoning — which needs a live workspace, a real shell, and a human in the loop for prioritization. AI Expedite gives you that loop without forcing every change through a pipeline.
Ready to accelerate your development workflow?