Cursor expands its product line with Origin

Cursor has introduced Origin, a new git forge the company says is built for the age of AI-assisted software development. The launch signals a broader push beyond Cursor's coding tools into the infrastructure layer that supports how code is stored, reviewed, and shared.

The company positioned Origin as a response to the pace of modern software work, where code can change faster than traditional development infrastructure was designed to manage. In its announcement, Cursor described Origin as being made for an "agentic era," a phrase that reflects the growing role of AI agents in coding workflows.

While the company did not provide a detailed public breakdown of product features in the source material, the language around Origin suggests it is intended to serve as a git forge, the kind of platform developers use to host repositories and collaborate on code changes. Cursor is framing the product as part of a new layer of tooling for teams that rely on automated and AI-assisted development.

iOS beta opens for Origin and Cursor's coding platform

Alongside the Origin announcement, Cursor also said it has started an iOS beta for Origin and its coding platform. That move points to an effort to make its tools available beyond desktop workflows, giving users a mobile option for interacting with the service while it remains in beta.

The company is currently directing interested users to a waitlist for Origin. Cursor says it will reach out when the product is ready for them, indicating that the platform is not yet broadly available.

The launch comes as software development tools increasingly compete to support AI-driven coding assistants and the workflows they create. Cursor has already built a reputation around its coding platform, and Origin appears to extend that strategy into the infrastructure that underpins collaboration and code management.

By introducing a git forge at the same time as a mobile beta, Cursor is signaling that it wants to address both the backend systems developers use and the interfaces they rely on to work across devices. The company has not shared a public timetable for general availability in the source material, but the waitlist suggests a staged rollout.

For now, Origin appears to be positioned as an early look at how Cursor wants to adapt developer infrastructure to faster, more automated coding processes. The company is betting that the next generation of software development will require tools designed specifically around AI agents, not just traditional human-led workflows.