The fastest-growing AI coding company in the world is suddenly building offices everywhere. Cursor, the developer-tools startup behind one of the most-used AI coding products, just laid out a hiring spree across Asia-Pacific.
The plan: 200 hires across Singapore, Japan, Sydney, Melbourne, and other regional cities over six months, with London opening in July.
What Cursor Is Doing
Cursor is hiring mostly in roles that get its product into companies, including sales, customer success, and solutions engineering, so the pitch is shifting from individual developers to the IT and engineering chiefs who buy software for whole companies.
Simon Green, a longtime APAC tech executive most recently at Palo Alto Networks, opened Cursor's Asia-Pacific headquarters, while the company's careers page lists roughly 90 open roles spread across Australia, New York, Berlin, London, and the Netherlands.
Today Cursor has about 800 employees, mostly in San Francisco and New York, and that number is about to look very different by the end of the year.
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The SpaceX Card
In late April, SpaceX struck a deal with Cursor giving the rocket company an option to acquire the startup for $60 billion later this year, or to pay $10 billion for ongoing work between the two companies. Cursor CEO Michael Truell said the team was excited to partner with SpaceX to scale its Composer model.
Cursor's public customer list reads like a who's-who of tech: Stripe, Coinbase, Discord, Salesforce, Neuralink, and Nvidia, with Nvidia also investing in the parent company and using the platform across its engineering and chip design teams.
That kind of customer concentration drives geographic expansion, because when your biggest buyers are global, your sales team has to be too.
What To Watch
Cursor is one of the most-watched names in AI infrastructure, and a 200-person APAC hiring sprint plus a London opening looks more like prep for a much bigger company than for a quiet one.
The next data point is what kind of revenue this expansion is supporting, since public clients are easy to list and paid contracts at scale are what investors actually want to see.
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