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AnysphereCursor
vs
CognitionDevin

Head-to-head comparison

Cursor vs Devin

Choose Cursor for ai-native coding workflows, software teams, agentic development support. Choose Devin for autonomous software task execution and longer engineering loops.

Strongest angleCursor: Workflow depth
Counter-strengthDevin: Workflow depth
Starting point$20/month vs $20/month
Value readPricing needs manual verification

Visual Overview

See both options before reading the deeper tradeoffs.

AI Assistants
Cursor
CursorAnysphere

AI-native coding workflows, software teams, agentic development support

Devin
DevinCognition

Autonomous software task execution and longer engineering loops

Our Verdict

Who should choose Cursor vs Devin?

Choose Cursor for ai-native coding workflows, software teams, agentic development support. Choose Devin for autonomous software task execution and longer engineering loops.

Best forCursor for ai-native coding workflows, software teams, agentic development support | Devin for autonomous software task execution and longer engineering loops
Not ideal forNarrower outside software development | More expensive than lightweight coding assistants once team rollout starts
If you want ai-native coding workflows, software teams, agentic development support -> choose Cursor.

Cursor is the better pick when that outcome matters more than breadth or familiarity.

If you want autonomous software task execution and longer engineering loops -> choose Devin.

Devin is the stronger option when that goal matters more than Cursor's main advantage.

Decision Summary

What matters most in Cursor vs Devin.

Use this section to scan the winner split, the main tradeoff, and the next useful click if neither option is clean enough.

Fast scan5 points
Main buyer mistake

The wrong move is forcing both products into the same job. This page only gets useful once the workflow split is clear.

If neither one fits

GitHub Copilot is the first nearby alternative to inspect when both finalists feel compromised.

Next comparison worth opening

ChatGPT vs Claude is the next useful head-to-head if this decision opens up into a wider shortlist.

Weakest tradeoff to inspect

Devin looks most vulnerable on value, so that is the first metric to pressure-test before you treat it as the safer long-term fit.

At A Glance

See which one fits you better: Cursor or Devin.

Each card answers the same decision questions: what the tool is best for, where it is strongest, where to be careful, and when to pick it over the other option.

Cursor
AI Code Editor

Cursor

Cursor is a coding-first AI product designed to act inside the editor, not just beside it. It is strongest when the buyer wants a primary coding environment optimized around AI assistance.

Starting price$20/month
Best forAI-native coding workflows, software teams
Strongest edgeWorkflow depth
Best uses
  • Code generation
  • Agent mode
  • Autocomplete
  • AI-native coding workflows, software teams, agentic development support
Strengths
  • Purpose-built for coding rather than generic chat
  • Strong editor-native workflow support
  • Clear team and enterprise posture for engineering organizations
  • Better fit for ai-native coding workflows, software teams, agentic development support
Watch outs
  • Narrower outside software development
  • Value depends on teams actually adopting it as part of the coding workflow
  • Pressure-test value before choosing
Pro tip

Choose Cursor when you want AI embedded deeply into the coding environment rather than bolted onto a general assistant.

Devin
Developer AI Software Engineer

Devin

Devin should be read as an autonomous software engineering product, not as a lightweight coding copilot. It is aimed at buyers who want the agent to do more of the implementation loop.

Starting price$20/month
Best forAutonomous software task execution and longer engineering...
Strongest edgeWorkflow depth
Best uses
  • Autonomous coding tasks
  • Agent execution
  • Task handoff
  • Autonomous software task execution and longer engineering loops
Strengths
  • Clear differentiation around autonomous software work rather than simple code completion
  • Useful when buyers want the agent to own more of the task chain
  • Team packaging is oriented toward collaborative usage instead of pure individual experimentation
  • Better fit for autonomous software task execution and longer engineering loops
Watch outs
  • More expensive than lightweight coding assistants once team rollout starts
  • Not the right fit if the buyer only wants inline autocomplete or cheap casual coding help
  • Pressure-test value before choosing
Pro tip

Choose Devin when autonomous software execution matters more than editor-native convenience.

Quick Winners

The fastest way to decide what each option wins at.

These cards answer common comparison intent immediately: overall fit, ease of adoption, value, and which product makes more sense for team usage.

Best overall

89/100

Cursor is the stronger default pick.

Cursor has the better overall score blend, so it is the safer starting point when the buyer wants the strongest all-around fit rather than a narrow edge case.

Open Cursor

Best for beginners

Starts at $20/month

Devin looks easier to adopt.

Devin reads as the friendlier choice when fast onboarding, lighter workflow friction, or broader mainstream usability matters more than maximum depth.

Open Devin

Best value

Starts at $20/month

Cursor gives the stronger value signal.

Cursor is the better value read when the buyer wants stronger return on spend instead of paying extra for strengths they may never use.

Open Cursor

Best for teams

5 integrations

Cursor is better positioned for team usage.

Cursor looks stronger when shared workflows, collaboration, admin depth, or integration surface area matter more than solo-user simplicity.

Open Cursor

Why trust this comparison

How Cursor and Devin are scored

Use the same scorecard to see where Cursor wins, where Devin wins, and which tradeoffs matter for your shortlist.

MethodologySee the framework
Same rubric on both sidesStructured evidence tablePricing and fit checks

Verdict by Use Case

Which option makes more sense depends on what the buyer is optimizing for.

These cards compress the recommendation layer before you drop into the detailed evidence.

Choose Cursor

Recommendation

Cursor is the better fit when workflow match comes first.

AI-native coding workflows, software teams, agentic development support. Its clearest case is when the buyer wants faster daily work, less friction, and strengths that keep paying off after the trial period.

Choose Devin

Recommendation

Devin makes more sense when its strengths match the main job to be done.

Autonomous software task execution and longer engineering loops. It becomes the stronger recommendation when those advantages help the buyer move faster, produce better work, or justify the spend more clearly.

How to read this

Decision lens

Start with fit, then confirm with the evidence.

The page compares normalized pricing, capabilities, metrics, and product-positioning data so the recommendation stays tied to concrete fit signals. The main pressure-test is Cursor's value versus Devin's value.

Structured Comparison

The underlying side-by-side evidence for Cursor and Devin.

This is the proof layer behind the summary cards above. Use it to verify pricing, platform coverage, integrations, and the exact feature differences.

Cursor

Quick summary

$20/month

Cursor is a coding-first AI product designed to act inside the editor, not just beside it. It is strongest when the buyer wants a primary coding environment optimized around AI assistance.

Pros
  • Purpose-built for coding rather than generic chat
  • Strong editor-native workflow support
  • Clear team and enterprise posture for engineering organizations
Cons
  • Narrower outside software development
  • Value depends on teams actually adopting it as part of the coding workflow
  • Pressure-test value before choosing

Devin

Quick summary

$20/month

Devin should be read as an autonomous software engineering product, not as a lightweight coding copilot. It is aimed at buyers who want the agent to do more of the implementation loop.

Pros
  • Clear differentiation around autonomous software work rather than simple code completion
  • Useful when buyers want the agent to own more of the task chain
  • Team packaging is oriented toward collaborative usage instead of pure individual experimentation
Cons
  • More expensive than lightweight coding assistants once team rollout starts
  • Not the right fit if the buyer only wants inline autocomplete or cheap casual coding help
  • Pressure-test value before choosing

Evidence Table

Feature-by-feature comparison

Cursor
Devin
#FeatureCursorDevin
1Overview
Best for
AI-native coding and agentic editor workflows
Agentic software execution and longer engineering tasks
2
Starting price
$20/month
$20/month
3
Free plan
Included
Not included
4Capabilities
Model access
Cursor plans across individual and business tiers
Devin plans for individual and team use
5
Voice support
No major voice-led buying story
No
6
Image understanding
Not core
Not core
7
Integrations
Editor-native coding workflows, GitHub, Bugbot, and team controls
Repository workflows, task management, and team administration
8Team adoption
Platforms
Desktop editor
Web
9
Team plan
Included
Included
10
Enterprise controls
Included
Included

Alternatives

What to look at next if neither of these products is the right fit.

If neither product is the right fit, nearby options in the same category help the user keep exploring without leaving the comparison workflow.

Final Recommendation

The final choice between Cursor and Devin.

Choose the tool that makes the job feel easier every day. The better option depends on whether the buyer is optimizing for workflow depth, workflow depth, pricing leverage, ecosystem fit, or lower operational friction.

Choose this whenCursor
  • Choose Cursor when workflow depth is the deciding factor and the workflow fits ai-native coding workflows, software teams, agentic development support.
  • It is the stronger option when its core strengths matter every day instead of only in edge cases.
  • It makes the most sense when value is a manageable tradeoff rather than a hard blocker.
Choose this whenDevin
  • Choose Devin when workflow depth matters more and the workflow is closer to autonomous software task execution and longer engineering loops.
  • It is the better fit when its main strengths solve the actual job to be done more directly.
  • It makes the most sense when value is acceptable compared with the upside elsewhere.
Bottom line

Cursor is the better choice for buyers optimizing around workflow depth, while Devin is the better choice for buyers optimizing around workflow depth. If the fit still looks close, use pricing, platform coverage, and the weakest metric on each side as the tie-breakers.

FAQ

Common questions people ask before choosing between Cursor and Devin.

These are the recurring buying questions behind most comparison intent: fit, strengths, pricing, tradeoffs, and which option makes more sense under different conditions.

What is the main difference between Cursor and Devin?

Choose Cursor for ai-native coding workflows, software teams, agentic development support. Choose Devin for autonomous software task execution and longer engineering loops. In structured terms, Cursor stands out most on workflow depth, while Devin stands out most on workflow depth. The clearest way to use this page is to decide which of those strengths actually affects the buyer's day-to-day workflow.

Which one is better for value and pricing?

Cursor starts at $20/month, while Devin starts at $20/month. The better value still depends on the real decision should be based on what each plan unlocks, how usage scales, and whether the buyer would actually use the extra capabilities in the more expensive option.

Which product should most people choose?

There is usually no universal winner. Cursor is the stronger fit for ai-native coding workflows, software teams, agentic development support, while Devin is the stronger fit for autonomous software task execution and longer engineering loops. Most buyers should start with the product whose strengths line up more directly with their daily workflow, team shape, and non-negotiable requirements.

What tradeoffs matter most in this comparison?

The main tradeoffs are where each product is weakest relative to its strengths. For Cursor, the key area to pressure-test is value. For Devin, it is value. The detailed table is valuable because it shows whether those weaker areas are acceptable compromises or real reasons to rule one option out.

Trust signalHuman-reviewed editorial page

Reviewed by

specly team

Editorial research team

The specly team treats comparison pages as decision pages, not feature dumps. The goal is to expose where each product wins, where it falls short, and what to open next if neither one is right.

Specly team review
Head-to-head tradeoffs
Direct next-step links