
~10 min read | Published March 18, 2026
Quick answer: Claude Cowork Dispatch lets you send a task to Claude from your phone while your desktop does the actual work. You come back to the finished output. No dedicated server, no technical setup. Two apps, five minutes to configure.
Why this exists: Anthropic launched Dispatch on March 17, 2026 as a research preview. It changes the "I need to be at my desk" limitation that has been the main friction point with Cowork. This is a plain-English breakdown of what it is, what it actually does, and where it fits in your day.
For you if: You use Claude or are curious about it. You want to understand what Cowork and Dispatch actually are without wading through a product announcement. You want to know whether this is worth your time right now.
Picture this: you're on your morning commute and you remember that report you need pulled together before your 10am meeting. You pull out your phone, type a quick message, and by the time you sit down at your desk, the work is done.
That's not a hypothetical anymore. That's Claude Cowork Dispatch.
But before we get into what Dispatch is and why it might actually change how you work, let's start from the beginning.
Claude is an artificial intelligence (AI) assistant made by Anthropic. If you've heard of ChatGPT, Claude is in the same family. You type something, Claude responds. You ask a question, it answers. You hand it a document, it reads it.
The difference is in how Anthropic built it. Claude is designed with safety and helpfulness as priorities from the start, not as an afterthought. And over the past year, Anthropic has been building it into something far more capable than a chatbox you type questions into.
Claude can now read your files, search the web, connect to your apps, and take actions on your behalf. Which brings us to Cowork.
Claude Cowork is Anthropic's version of an agentic AI workspace. Think of it as the difference between asking someone a question and actually hiring them to do work.
Regular Claude chat is back-and-forth. You ask, it answers. Cowork is different. You give Claude a task, connect it to your tools and files, and it works through the job step by step.
Cowork lives inside the Claude Desktop app and lets Claude connect to things like your email, your calendar, your local files, and third-party apps through what Anthropic calls Connectors. Once you set those connections up, Claude can read your inbox, pull data from spreadsheets, summarize documents, and put together reports, all without you copying and pasting a single thing.
Here's the catch most people run into: Cowork lives on your computer. If you want Claude to work on something, you have to be at your desk with the app open. At least, that was the catch.
Dispatch is a new feature inside Cowork that lets you send Claude tasks from your phone and have your computer do the actual work. Anthropic launched it on March 17, 2026 as a research preview, starting with Max plan subscribers and rolling out to Pro plan users shortly after.
Here's how it works in plain terms. Your desktop computer runs Claude Cowork the way it normally does, with access to your files, your connected apps, and your browser. Your phone acts like a remote control. You open the Claude mobile app, send a message through a section called Dispatch, and Claude picks it up and starts working on your computer. When it's done, you can check back on your phone or just sit down at your desk and see the finished output waiting for you.
The whole setup takes about five minutes. You download Claude Desktop if you don't have it, download the Claude mobile app, sign into both with the same account, and pair them. No configuration files, no technical setup, no server to maintain.
You send a task from your phone. Claude runs it on your desktop. You come back to finished work.
You might be thinking: so it's just remote access to Claude? What's the big deal?
The big deal is the gap it closes between when an idea hits you and when you can act on it.
Most productivity tools assume you're at your desk when inspiration strikes. Your brain doesn't work that way. You think of something on a walk, in the shower, sitting in traffic, or right before you fall asleep. And by the time you get to a computer, that clear thought has dissolved into a vague memory of something you were going to do.
Dispatch gives you a way to hand that task off the moment it comes to you. Not a note to yourself. Not a reminder you'll probably ignore. An actual assignment to an AI that will work on it while you're doing other things.
And because Claude already has access to everything you've connected in Cowork, it doesn't need you to explain where things are. It already knows. It can go find the file, the email thread, the spreadsheet, and do the actual work.
Here are some practical examples that show where Dispatch fits in a real workday:
On your way in, you send a message: "Go through my emails from this client over the last two weeks and summarize what's still open." Claude reads your email and has a clean summary ready before you walk into the room.
"Scan Sentry for the last 24 hours, sort the issues by impact, and write up a summary." You send it on your commute. The report is done before your first coffee.
"Take my latest blog post and create a LinkedIn post, a short email version, and a Twitter thread from it." You send it at night. Drafts are waiting in the morning.
"This folder has a CSV with Q1 sales data. Find the top three trends and write a short summary." Claude processes your local files while you're in a completely different meeting.
Because Dispatch has access to your browser on your desktop, Claude can search, compare, and read pages to help you gather information, compare options, or pull data from websites.
Early testing from people who've tried it shows a roughly 50/50 success rate on more complex tasks, according to MacStories' hands-on coverage. Summarizing and finding information works well. Tasks that require more creative action, like sending a message to someone or interacting with specific desktop apps, are still rough. This is a research preview and Anthropic is upfront about that.
The bigger shift here is not about any single task. It's about what happens when the gap between "I need to do this" and "I started this" shrinks to a text message.
Most people have a list of things they want to get done that never quite makes it to the top of the pile. Not because those things are unimportant, but because starting them requires uninterrupted time at a computer. The meeting prep that doesn't happen until you're already in the meeting. The data summary that gets skipped because pulling it manually would take an hour you don't have.
Dispatch makes those tasks something you can hand off whenever you think of them. The friction of "I'll do that when I get to my desk" disappears because you don't have to wait until you're at your desk to start.
It also means your computer can work while you're away from it. Not just a scheduled backup or a download. Actual work. The kind of work that used to require your full attention.
That is a different kind of productivity than most tools offer.
Once you have both apps installed and signed in with the same account, go to Cowork in Claude Desktop and follow the Dispatch setup prompt, which walks you through pairing your phone. The whole thing takes about five minutes.
The safety angle is also worth acknowledging. From your phone, you can now access everything on your desktop through Claude, including files, connectors, and any plugins you've installed. Be mindful of what you've granted Claude access to, since this extends that access to a mobile surface. Anthropic's own guidance puts it plainly: only connect these agents if you're comfortable with what they could do, not just what you intend them to do.
Dispatch sits alongside a trend Anthropic and other AI companies are moving toward: AI that works on your behalf, not just in response to you.
Most AI tools today are reactive. You type, they respond. Dispatch is a step toward something more like delegation. You assign, it works, you review.
That shift matters because it changes what's possible in a day. When the thing standing between you and a task is not your own time or attention but just the act of assigning it, you start to see the actual bottleneck in your work more clearly.
For a lot of people, that bottleneck is not knowing what to do. It's not having the time to sit down and do it. Dispatch gives you a way to start the clock on a task without being the one running it.
If you're already using Claude Cowork for daily work, Dispatch is the logical next step. And if you've been curious about Cowork but kept coming back to the "I need to be at my desk" problem, Dispatch removes that barrier.
It's worth trying.
Part of the Quick Reference Kit from elijah.ai. Elijah R. Young helps organizations understand and work with AI and automation in plain English. Since 2018, he's helped teams build automation that sticks. Get in touch for strategy and delivery support.