Artificial intelligence (AI) coding startup Cursor’s annualised revenue surpassed $2 billion in February, according to a Bloomberg report on Tuesday.
The report said sales have doubled in the past three months, with nearly 60% of revenue now coming from corporate customers, including both first-time enterprise clients and conversions from its existing consumer base.
Cursor was last valued at $29.3 billion when it raised $2.3 billion in a funding round co-led by Accel and Coatue in November.
The same month last year, Cursor added that it had crossed $1 billion in annualised revenue and had grown to a team of more than 300 people.
Founded in 2022 by Michael Truell, Sualeh Asif, Arvid Lunnemark, and Aman Sanger, it has built an AI-first coding environment and in-house models that generate, explain, and modify code for software teams.
It claims to be producing more code through its agentic system than any other AI product currently on the market.
According to Forbes estimates published on November 13, cofounders Michael Truell, Aman Sanger, Sualeh Asif, and Arvid Lunnemark together hold a 4.5% stake in the company, worth at least $1.3 billion.
Cursor’s India biz
India is the second- or third-largest market for Cursor, its cofounder Aman Sanger told ET in an interaction last year.
“A big push for us is we want to be used by the world's biggest and best enterprises, in addition to developers across the world. So, we probably are doing a push into Indian enterprises as well,” he said.
Competition from Google, OpenAI, Anthropic
The vibe coding space is crowded with products like Anthropic's Claude, OpenAI's Codex, and Google Code Assist.
On competition with large players, Sanger said that the industry remains in its early stages, with considerable scope for incremental advances and expanded product capabilities.
“I think we are still in the early innings of this, and I think there's a lot of time left for building step-ups and product functionality to see who the winners ultimately look like versus what they look like today.”
Sanger said Cursor aims to build a sustainable business by funding research and development (R&D) through revenue rather than relying heavily on external capital, unlike many foundational model companies.
Cursor has about one million users and 360,000 paid subscribers globally, according to reports.
The report said sales have doubled in the past three months, with nearly 60% of revenue now coming from corporate customers, including both first-time enterprise clients and conversions from its existing consumer base.
Cursor was last valued at $29.3 billion when it raised $2.3 billion in a funding round co-led by Accel and Coatue in November.
The same month last year, Cursor added that it had crossed $1 billion in annualised revenue and had grown to a team of more than 300 people.
Founded in 2022 by Michael Truell, Sualeh Asif, Arvid Lunnemark, and Aman Sanger, it has built an AI-first coding environment and in-house models that generate, explain, and modify code for software teams.
It claims to be producing more code through its agentic system than any other AI product currently on the market.
According to Forbes estimates published on November 13, cofounders Michael Truell, Aman Sanger, Sualeh Asif, and Arvid Lunnemark together hold a 4.5% stake in the company, worth at least $1.3 billion.
Cursor’s India biz
India is the second- or third-largest market for Cursor, its cofounder Aman Sanger told ET in an interaction last year.
“A big push for us is we want to be used by the world's biggest and best enterprises, in addition to developers across the world. So, we probably are doing a push into Indian enterprises as well,” he said.
Competition from Google, OpenAI, Anthropic
The vibe coding space is crowded with products like Anthropic's Claude, OpenAI's Codex, and Google Code Assist.
On competition with large players, Sanger said that the industry remains in its early stages, with considerable scope for incremental advances and expanded product capabilities.
“I think we are still in the early innings of this, and I think there's a lot of time left for building step-ups and product functionality to see who the winners ultimately look like versus what they look like today.”
Sanger said Cursor aims to build a sustainable business by funding research and development (R&D) through revenue rather than relying heavily on external capital, unlike many foundational model companies.
Cursor has about one million users and 360,000 paid subscribers globally, according to reports.




