SpaceX has agreed to acquire Cursor, the AI-powered coding assistant developed by Anysphere, in an all-stock deal valuing the startup at approximately $60 billion. The announcement came on June 16, just days after SpaceX’s own initial public offering valued the rocket and satellite company at over $350 billion.

Cursor has built one of the most widely used AI coding tools in the software industry. The product integrates directly into development environments and uses large language models to help programmers write, review, and debug code. The company recently disclosed annualized revenue of $2.6 billion, a figure that reflects explosive growth driven by enterprise adoption across technology, finance, and media sectors.
SpaceX shares, which began trading publicly earlier this month, rose to $211 following the acquisition announcement — roughly 56 percent above their IPO price. The all-stock structure means no immediate cash outlay for SpaceX, but the deal will dilute existing shareholders when it closes, which the company says is expected in the third quarter of 2026.
The strategic rationale centres on SpaceX’s growing software ambitions. The company operates Starlink, which provides broadband internet to tens of millions of subscribers globally, and has been expanding its internal software engineering capacity to support both the satellite network and its rocket programs. Integrating Cursor’s AI coding capabilities into SpaceX’s engineering workflows and potentially offering it to Starlink business customers would provide immediate utility.
Elon Musk, who founded SpaceX and remains its chief executive, did not comment directly on the acquisition, but the deal aligns with his broader philosophy of accelerating software development through AI. Musk has separately invested in AI ventures including his own xAI company, maker of the Grok model.
Cursor’s founding team at Anysphere — Sualeh Asif, Aman Sanger, Arvid Lunnemark, and Michael Truell — will reportedly remain with the company through the transition period. Their continued involvement was described by sources close to the deal as a condition of the agreement.
The deal is one of the largest acquisitions in the AI tools sector and signals a widening appetite among major technology and industrial companies to absorb software AI capabilities rather than build them from scratch.
Regulatory review is expected to be straightforward given the complementary nature of the businesses. Closing is targeted for Q3 2026 pending shareholder approval.



