Days after a public listing that pushed its valuation into the rare upper tier of global technology companies, SpaceX has agreed to acquire AI coding startup Cursor in a $60 billion all-stock transaction.
The deal formalizes a relationship that had already been unfolding for months through partnership talks and a contingent agreement structure. Earlier discussions between the two companies included a $10 billion collaboration tied to AI coding tools, alongside a pre-negotiated option for SpaceX to complete a full acquisition at a $60 billion valuation.
Cursor, founded in 2022 under its parent company Anysphere, built its reputation around an AI-assisted coding environment used by software engineers to write, review, and refactor code inside a single workspace. Its adoption accelerated quickly in developer teams, pushing it into the center of the fast-growing market for AI programming tools.
The company’s growth came alongside increasing pressure from larger AI model developers that have begun embedding code generation directly into general-purpose systems. That shift narrowed the gap between specialized coding assistants and broader foundation models, reshaping competitive dynamics across the sector.
For SpaceX, the acquisition expands its push into artificial intelligence systems that extend beyond its core aerospace operations. The company has been building out compute infrastructure and internal AI tools aimed at software development and engineering workflows, while also positioning itself as a provider of large-scale computing capacity to external partners.
The transaction is structured as an all-stock deal, reflecting SpaceX’s elevated market valuation following its recent IPO. That valuation gives the company significant leverage in acquisitions of this scale without immediate cash outlay.
Cursor’s leadership said the company will continue working on its core product direction under SpaceX ownership, with a focus on advancing AI systems for software engineering teams and enterprise customers. The integration is expected to deepen Cursor’s access to compute resources, a constraint that has become increasingly important in the development and deployment of advanced AI tools.
Cursor’s trajectory has been closely watched as one of the faster-scaling entrants in the AI coding segment, with revenue reportedly crossing the billion-dollar annualized mark as adoption expanded across software teams.
The acquisition also signals further consolidation in the AI tooling market, where smaller specialized companies have been absorbed by larger platforms capable of supplying the compute, distribution, and infrastructure needed to support rapidly scaling models.
With the deal expected to close later this year, Cursor is set to become part of SpaceX’s broader AI strategy, which has increasingly blurred the boundary between aerospace engineering and large-scale software systems development.



