SpaceX confirmed a $60 billion deal to acquire Cursor, the AI-powered code editor that has become one of the most popular developer tools in the world. The acquisition closed on Thursday, June 19, just days after SpaceX completed its own initial public offering.

The Deal That Came Out of Nowhere
Elon Musk’s SpaceX moved fast. The company, fresh off its IPO that valued it at over $350 billion, used its surging stock as currency to lock in the Cursor deal. According to Fortune, SpaceX’s stock appreciation alone covered the acquisition cost in just a few hours of trading after the IPO.
Cursor’s two cofounders, both in their twenties, saw their personal net worths roughly double overnight, as reported by Forbes. The startup had previously been valued at around $9 billion in a 2025 funding round.
Why Cursor Matters
Cursor is not just another code editor. It is an AI-first development environment built on top of Visual Studio Code that uses large language models to suggest entire code blocks, debug automatically, and explain complex codebases in plain English. Developer adoption exploded in 2025 and 2026, with reports suggesting over 2 million active users.
The tool competes directly with GitHub Copilot, Amazon Q Developer, and Anthropic’s Claude Code. Unlike these, Cursor runs as a standalone IDE rather than a plugin, giving it deeper integration with the AI coding workflow.
What SpaceX Gets
SpaceX does not build software products for developers. The acquisition appears to be about internal tooling and talent. SpaceX already uses AI extensively for rocket design simulations, launch trajectory optimization, and Starlink network management. Adding Cursor’s AI coding expertise could accelerate all of these efforts.
There is also the Tesla and xAI angle. Musk’s AI company xAI, which develops the Grok family of models, could integrate Cursor’s technology to build a more complete AI development platform. The synergy between xAI’s language models and Cursor’s developer tools is obvious.
Industry Impact
The AI coding tools space was already crowded. GitHub Copilot dominates market share with an estimated 60%+ of AI coding tool users. Cursor had carved out a loyal niche among power users who preferred its standalone editor approach. Amazon Q Developer targets the AWS ecosystem. Claude Code appeals to developers who want deeper reasoning capabilities.
With SpaceX backing, Cursor now has resources that dwarf what GitHub gets from Microsoft. This could force competitors to accelerate their own roadmaps. Microsoft, which owns GitHub Copilot, may need to invest more aggressively to maintain its lead.
Developer Community Reaction
Reactions on social media were mixed. Many developers expressed concern that SpaceX’s ownership could lead to a subscription price increase. Cursor currently offers a free tier with limited AI completions, a Pro plan at $20/month, and a Business plan at $40/month per seat.
Others worried about Musk’s track record with acquired companies. Twitter’s transformation into X raised questions about whether Musk would prioritize profitability over the developer experience that made Cursor popular.
Musk addressed some concerns on his own platform, writing that Cursor would “operate independently” and that the team would continue building “the best AI coding tool on the planet.” He also hinted at free access for open-source contributors, though no formal program has been announced.
Regulatory Scrutiny Ahead
A $60 billion acquisition will almost certainly draw antitrust attention. The FTC has already been investigating AI market concentration, and combining SpaceX’s infrastructure with Cursor’s developer tools creates a vertically integrated play that regulators may want to examine.
According to Reuters, the deal is expected to close in Q3 2026, pending regulatory approval. SpaceX and Cursor have hired separate legal teams to manage the antitrust review process.
