Ramp’s June 2026 report ranks software vendors by fastest growth in market share — a harder metric to game than buzz or funding. The “Fastest Growing” list reflects where businesses are actually shifting budget, not just experimenting. What stands out this month: Anthropic is the clear leader, design and productivity AI tools are going mainstream, and the developer infrastructure stack is consolidating around a handful of key players.

Anthropic Is Winning the Enterprise AI Race
Anthropic tops the fastest-growing list in the Foundational LLMs category — and the numbers behind that ranking are significant. Claude Code’s annualized run-rate revenue crossed $2.5 billion in early 2026, more than doubling since the start of the year. Eight of the Fortune 10 are now Claude customers. Anthropic has also been pushing aggressively into financial services, offering Claude-powered workflows for valuation reviews, report generation, and month-end close — integrated across the full Microsoft 365 stack. For enterprise buyers, that’s a meaningful adoption path. The Ramp ranking reflects this momentum: Anthropic isn’t just a research darling anymore; it’s the AI vendor that enterprise finance, legal, and engineering teams are actually paying for.
Granola: The Quiet Winner in AI Productivity
Granola, listed under AI Notetaker, is one of the more interesting names on this list. In a crowded market for meeting transcription and summarization tools, Granola has built a reputation for doing the job well without being intrusive — a product that works in the background and surfaces what matters. Its fastest-growing ranking signals that AI meeting tools have crossed from “nice to have” to “standard operating procedure” for a growing number of business teams.
Vercel and Netlify: The Developer Infrastructure Duopoly
Both Vercel and Netlify appear in the Web Hosting & Site Builders category. That two competitors from the same niche both show up on a fastest-growing list is notable — it reflects the explosion of AI-assisted web development. As tools like Claude Code and GitHub Copilot enable faster shipping cycles, teams need deployment infrastructure that keeps pace. Vercel and Netlify both offer Git-integrated, zero-config deployment pipelines that have become the default for modern web teams. The growth here is downstream of the AI coding boom.
Canva: Content Creation AI Goes Mainstream
Canva in Content Creation is the least surprising entry on this list — and arguably the most consequential. Canva has aggressively embedded AI features across its platform, enabling non-designers to generate graphics, presentations, and social content at speed. The Ramp data confirms that businesses are paying for this at scale. Canva’s growth isn’t a story about a niche AI tool; it’s a story about AI-powered creative workflows becoming a standard line item in business budgets.
Grammarly: Productivity AI That Actually Sticks
Grammarly under Productivity AI has been around long enough that it might feel like an obvious pick — but its fastest-growing status in mid-2026 reflects a real shift. The product has evolved well beyond spell-check. Its AI rewrites, tone adjustments, and generative drafting features now compete in territory that newer AI writing tools are fighting over. The fact that it’s still growing fast, on Ramp business spend data, suggests enterprises trust the brand and the security posture — two things newer entrants are still building.
Figma: A Resilient Platform in a Competitive Market
Figma appears in Software Design — and its inclusion is worth examining in context. The company went public on the NYSE in July 2025 at $33 per share. Since then, it has faced real competitive pressure: Anthropic’s Claude Design sent its stock down 7% on launch day, and AI-native design tools are multiplying. Yet Figma still shows up on Ramp’s fastest-growing list. That’s a signal that its core user base — product and engineering teams — remains loyal, and that its AI feature rollout (Figma Make, Figma Sites, native MCP integration) is landing. The stock has struggled since IPO, but the spend data tells a more resilient story.
Perplexity AI: The Search Challenger Getting Business Budget
Perplexity AI in Search & Research AI rounds out the list with a product that is increasingly being purchased at the team and enterprise level. Founded by IIT Madras graduate Aravind Srinivas, Perplexity has carved out a distinct position as a research-grade AI search engine — one that cites sources, answers directly, and is now valued at $20 billion. Ramp’s fastest-growing ranking confirms what has been visible anecdotally: knowledge workers at companies are choosing Perplexity over traditional search for research tasks, and businesses are starting to pay for it centrally.
Tailscale and Higgsfield AI: Infrastructure and Video Round It Out
Tailscale in VPN/Networking reflects the growing need for secure, zero-config networking as remote and hybrid work remains the norm and AI workloads increasingly run across distributed infrastructure. Higgsfield AI in AI Video is the newest entrant in the category — AI-generated video is moving from consumer novelty to business tool, and Higgsfield is one of the companies capturing that early enterprise spend.
The Big Picture
The fastest-growing list in June 2026 is, more than anything else, a portrait of AI going from experimental to operational across business functions. Anthropic leads on the model layer. Vercel and Netlify lead on deployment. Canva and Grammarly own content and productivity. Figma is defending its design turf. And Perplexity is quietly becoming the research tool of choice for knowledge workers. The businesses paying for these tools aren’t running pilots — they’re building workflows.