Cursor has crossed $2 billion in annualised revenue, doubling its run rate in just three months. The four-year-old startup is now the fastest-growing AI coding tool by revenue, outpacing both GitHub Copilot and Windsurf in subscription growth.
The growth coincides with the release of Composer 2, Cursor's next-generation coding agent. On Terminal-Bench 2.0 it scored 61.3, up from 44.2 for Composer 1.5. On SWE-bench Multilingual it hit 73.7, putting it in the same league as the best standalone models. Composer 2 handles multi-file refactoring, cross-language reasoning, and long-running agentic tasks with noticeably fewer hallucinations than its predecessor.
Alongside the model upgrade, Cursor shipped Automations — always-on agents that trigger from external events. Connect Slack, Linear, GitHub, PagerDuty, or any webhook, define instructions, and Cursor handles the rest. A Slack message about a bug can automatically spawn an agent that investigates the codebase, drafts a fix, and opens a PR. The JetBrains IDE integration also went live in March, bringing Cursor's agent capabilities to IntelliJ, PyCharm, and WebStorm via the Agent Client Protocol.