In a deal that stunned Silicon Valley and the global tech industry, SpaceX announced in June 2026 that it would acquire Anysphere — the company behind AI code editor Cursor — for $60 billion in an all-stock deal.
This is the largest acquisition of a VC-backed startup in history, and it comes just days after SpaceX completed its own $75 billion IPO — the biggest in stock market history. Here is everything you need to know about this deal, why it happened, and what it means.
| Acquirer | SpaceX (Space Exploration Technologies Corp) / Elon Musk |
| Target | Anysphere Inc. — maker of Cursor AI code editor |
| Deal Value | $60 billion (all-stock) |
| Deal Type | SpaceX issues Class A common stock to Cursor shareholders |
| Price Determination | 7-day volume-weighted average of SpaceX closing price pre-close |
| Expected Close | Q3 2026 (pending regulatory approvals) |
| Cursor ARR at deal | $4 billion annualised (doubled from $2B in 4 months) |
| Record Set | Largest VC-backed startup acquisition in history |
| Cursor Paying Users | 1 million+; 50%+ of Fortune 500 are active clients |
The Deal: What Happened?
SpaceX — Elon Musk’s aerospace and technology company, which had recently merged with his AI firm xAI and completed a landmark $75 billion IPO — announced in June 2026 that it has agreed to acquire Anysphere Inc., the San Francisco startup behind the AI code editor Cursor, for $60 billion in an all-stock transaction.
Under the deal, SpaceX will issue Class A common stock to Anysphere shareholders, with the exact number of shares based on a 7-day volume-weighted average of SpaceX’s price before closing. The deal is expected to close in Q3 2026, subject to regulatory clearance. Once complete, Cursor will operate as a wholly owned subsidiary of SpaceX.
Founders Michael Truell, Sualeh Asif, Aman Sanger, and Arvid Lunnemark are expected to continue leading the product. At $60 billion, this is the largest acquisition of a VC-backed startup in recorded history — Cursor was founded in 2022, making it roughly four years old at the time of the deal, with $4 billion in annualised revenue growing at approximately 100% every four months.
The deal came just days after SpaceX’s own $75 billion IPO — making it an extraordinary week for Elon Musk’s empire. For Cursor’s full background and ownership history, see who owns Cursor (Anysphere).
Why Did SpaceX Buy Cursor?
The strategic logic centres on AI model distribution. SpaceX earlier in 2026 merged with xAI — Elon Musk’s AI research company, makers of the Grok large language model — creating a combined entity with both rocket technology and competitive AI capabilities.
The gap was a developer-facing product that could put Grok in front of millions of professional software engineers daily. Cursor fills that gap perfectly. Right now, Cursor sends developer queries to Anthropic’s Claude and OpenAI’s GPT-4, paying both companies significant API fees and strengthening their ecosystems with real developer usage data.
By acquiring Cursor and integrating Grok, SpaceX redirects that developer mindshare toward xAI’s own model. It is the same playbook as owning a distribution platform then swapping in your own product: acquire the channel, replace the dependency. For Anthropic’s perspective on the competitive shift, see who owns Anthropic, and for OpenAI context see who owns OpenAI.
What Does Cursor’s $4 Billion ARR Tell Us?
Cursor’s revenue trajectory is one of the most striking in software history. The company went from $0 to $2 billion annualised revenue by February 2026, then doubled that to $4 billion by June 2026 — in just four months. At that growth rate, analysts projected $8–10 billion ARR within a further 12 months.
Software businesses at Cursor’s scale typically run gross margins of 70–80%, meaning Cursor was approaching $3 billion in gross profit annually.
SpaceX paying $60 billion — roughly 15x forward ARR — for a business compounding this fast is, by any reasonable financial model, defensible. Early investors Andreessen Horowitz and Thrive Capital are likely receiving returns of 20–40x their invested capital from this deal.
What Happens to Cursor After the Acquisition?
For the 1 million+ developers who use Cursor daily, the central concern is: what happens to Claude and GPT-4 inside the editor? Many developers chose Cursor specifically because Anthropic’s Claude is excellent at code.
If SpaceX forces a Grok-only model after acquisition, users who see a quality drop will evaluate alternatives: Windsurf (by Codeium), Claude Code (Anthropic’s own terminal coding agent), or returning to VS Code with GitHub Copilot.
Conversely, if Grok proves competitive and SpaceX maintains model choice, Cursor could accelerate further with SpaceX’s infrastructure resources behind it. The founding team remaining in place is a positive signal — the first major product update post-close will signal the direction clearly.
Timeline: From Startup to $60 Billion
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 2022 | Anysphere Inc. founded by four MIT graduates in San Francisco |
| 2023 | Cursor v0.1 released; viral early adoption in developer communities |
| 2024 | Series A led by a16z; crosses $10M ARR; mass developer switching from VS Code |
| 2025 | $2.5B valuation; $100M+ ARR; becomes #1 standalone AI code editor globally |
| Feb 2026 | $2B annualised ARR; 1 million+ paying subscribers |
| Early 2026 | SpaceX completes $75B IPO — largest in stock market history; merges with xAI |
| June 2026 | Cursor ARR doubles to $4B; 50%+ of Fortune 500 as active clients |
| June 2026 | SpaceX announces $60B all-stock acquisition of Anysphere — record VC deal |
| Q3 2026 | Acquisition expected to close; Cursor becomes SpaceX/xAI subsidiary |
My Take on the SpaceX–Cursor Deal
$60 billion for a four-year-old code editor sounds unhinged until you look at the growth curve. Cursor is compounding at roughly 100% every four months — a rate that, if sustained, puts it at $10 billion ARR before 2027.
Software at that scale and margin profile is genuinely worth what SpaceX is paying. The strategic angle is even more compelling: this isn’t just a financial acquisition, it’s an attempt to capture the daily workflow of the world’s professional developer community for xAI’s Grok. The risk is Elon’s track record with acquisitions. Tesla — excellent. X (Twitter) — chaotic, product quality suffered, many users left.
Cursor’s outcome depends on whether Musk lets the founding team run the product independently while only changing the underlying model infrastructure, or whether he overreaches. Given how quickly developers switch tools when something better comes along, SpaceX’s $60 billion asset could erode fast if Cursor’s model quality drops. That is the central bet of this deal.