
Anysphere’s Cursor AI, with its over 1 million daily users, marks an important example of how quickly AI-native tools are moving from side experiment to core part of the software development cycle.
For a startup that launched its AI-powered assistant in 2023, reaching that scale in just a couple of years places Cursor among the fastest-growing products in the current AI development cycle.
And Cursor’s massive user base is now translating into serious money for the company. Cursor’s annual recurring revenue (ARR) passed $500 million dollars by mid‑2025 and crossed $1 billion later that year, before recently topping $2 billion in February 2026. The company has already raised around $2.3 billion at a $29 billion valuation and is now in talks for a new round that could value it at about $50 billion.
What Makes Cursor AI Different
So far, what has made Cursor stand out is that it connects to several large language models (LLMs), including GPT‑4, GPT‑4 Turbo (labeled GPT‑4o), Claude 3.5 Sonnet, and Claude Opus, along with its own faster “cursor‑small” model for lightweight tasks.
This allows for developers to switch between models for different jobs and use long‑context options to work across large repositories. For many engineers, the combination of editor integration and flexible model choice is the practical difference between occasionally using the technology and relying on it every day for work.
Why Developers Are Moving Over
Several factors are playing into why developers use Cursor a lot, with productivity sitting right at the center. The AI-powered assistant can complete code, generate tests, spot bugs, and propose fixes across entire files or projects, which helps turn common tasks into quick results.
Cursor has also made headway with larger organizations. By its Series C funding stage, the company reported that its tools were in use at more than half of Fortune 500 companies, which immediately signaled adoption far beyond personal projects.
However, Cursor’s fast rise has also drawn sharper scrutiny from the developers now relying on it every day. Some of the loudest complaints focus on pricing changes and token usage, especially from users who say their monthly bills rose faster than expected once they moved more of their workflow into the tool.
Reliability is another challenge. Developers have reported that Cursor can struggle on very large or heavily‑abstracted codebases, with multi‑file refactors that sometimes miss edge cases or introduce subtle regressions that are hard to spot in review. There are also frustrations that repeat itself around occasional editor bugs, performance issues, and AI suggestions that look plausible but are wrong, which can erode trust if teams do not keep strict review habits in place.
There are also security and privacy concerns. Many engineers have continued to raise concerns about how much code is sent to external models, how long it is retained, and what information security teams have on AI‑driven changes made to their critical systems.
What Comes Next For Cursor AI
Anysphere raised $900 million in the second quarter of 2025, led by Thrive Capital. The company is reportedly in early discussions for an additional round at a valuation of approximately $50 billion.
There’s also the fact that the generative AI coding assistant market, valued at $25.9 million in 2024, is projected to reach $97.9 billion by 2030.
What this means is that as the market expands, Cursor’s challenge is holding onto its growth rate against competitors with deeper pockets and broader platform reach, particularly Microsoft, whose GitHub Copilot reached 4.7 million paid subscribers by January 2026. For now, the growth numbers suggest Cursor has found something that works.