Cursor is changing its Teams plan to provide more included usage, better cost controls, and a new option for heavier agent users. The updates will apply to new customers immediately and to renewing customers beginning with billing cycles starting July 1, 2026.
The company said the changes are meant to reflect how teams actually use the product, especially as a small number of power users can drive much of a team’s AI spending.
Under the revised structure, every Teams seat will include two separate usage pools. One pool will cover Cursor’s own models and Auto, while the other will cover third-party API models. Cursor said the split is intended to make usage limits clearer and give users more included capacity where the company can offer it at lower cost.
The Standard seat remains priced at $40 per month on monthly plans, or $32 per seat per month on annual plans. Cursor said Standard users will now get more total usage without any increase in cost.
The company tied part of that change to its Composer model. Cursor said Composer 2.5 delivers frontier-level performance at a lower price point than the frontier models that previously required higher spend. That, it argued, makes it possible to reserve more included usage for first-party models and Auto.
Cursor is also introducing a new Premium seat for users who consume far more agent usage than the typical team member. The company said a small number of users often account for the bulk of unpredictable on-demand costs, which can make it harder for administrators to plan budgets.
The new Premium seat offers five times the included usage of Standard while costing three times as much. Premium is priced at $120 per seat per month on monthly plans and $96 per seat per month on annual plans. Teams can mix Standard and Premium seats within the same organization.
Cursor said it expects the Composer usage pool on Premium to cover a full month of heavy agent usage for 99% of users.
Alongside the pricing changes, Cursor is adding more visibility into usage. The dashboard now shows how close users are to their limits, with separate tracking for Auto and Composer usage and for third-party API models.
If the system identifies users who would be better served by a different seat type, Cursor said it will surface recommendations to help teams choose the most efficient mix of plans.
The company also rebuilt its spend alerting tools. Administrators can now set smart alerts using dollar thresholds and send them to the right people through Slack or email before charges become a surprise.
The changes come as AI coding tools continue to experiment with ways to balance broad access, heavy usage, and predictable enterprise billing. Cursor’s update appears aimed at both lowering the effective cost of routine use and giving organizations more control over the users most likely to push spending higher.