Key Takeaways:
- OpenAI has reportedly reached an agreement to acquire Windsurf (formerly Codeium) for over $3 billion, marking its largest acquisition to date.
- The tech giant previously held acquisition talks with Anysphere, the creator of the coding tool Cursor, but failed to reach an agreement despite multiple attempts.
- This move signals OpenAI’s intent to dominate AI-assisted devtech and lock in market share before competitors like Google and Amazon scale similar tools.
The race to own AI-assisted coding is heating up — and OpenAI just went all in.
The tech giant has reached an agreement for the $3 billion acquisition of Windsurf, Bloomberg reported.
This comes after failed buyout talks with Cursor’s parent company, Anysphere.
This strategic pivot shows the intensifying competition to dominate the rapidly growing AI-assisted coding market.
OpenAI has agreed to buy Windsurf, an artificial intelligence-assisted coding tool formerly known as Codeium, for about $3 billion, marking the ChatGPT maker’s largest acquisition to date https://t.co/ZhWgEHGXVc
— Bloomberg (@business) May 6, 2025
OpenAI’s move to secure Windsurf follows earlier, unfruitful attempts to acquire Cursor — a coding tool that gained significant traction among developers.
Cursor rose to prominence after OpenAI Co-Founder Andrej Karpathy publicly praised it for “vibe coding.”
It's a term he used in an X post referencing tools that let developers guide AI to write code with minimal friction.
There's a new kind of coding I call "vibe coding", where you fully give in to the vibes, embrace exponentials, and forget that the code even exists. It's possible because the LLMs (e.g. Cursor Composer w Sonnet) are getting too good. Also I just talk to Composer with SuperWhisper…
— Andrej Karpathy (@karpathy) February 2, 2025
Cursor, built on Microsoft’s Visual Studio Code and integrated with Anthropic’s Claude 3.5 Sonnet, was even preferred by some developers over Microsoft’s GitHub Copilot.
By March, Cursor had surpassed 1 million daily active users and was reportedly seeking a $10 billion valuation.
Anysphere, founded in 2022 and backed by major VCs, including a seed round from OpenAI’s own startup fund, has already reached $200 million in annual recurring revenue.
Despite these metrics, acquisition talks with OpenAI broke down multiple times.
Meanwhile, Windsurf (formerly Codeium) has raised $2.85 billion to date, and previously closed a $150 million round at a $1.25 billion valuation.
Bloomberg revealed Windsurf’s current negotiations position it at a $3 billion valuation, with past rounds led by General Catalyst, Greenoaks, and Kleiner Perkins.
This indicates its strong strategic value as a cloud compute optimization player — a core enabler for generative AI applications.
OpenAI is aggressively expanding into the booming market of AI-driven coding assistants, a sector that has seen skyrocketing valuations and intense VC activity.
Terms of the deal are not yet final, and neither company has commented publicly about it.
Owning DevTech, Layer by Layer
The acquisition comes on the heels of OpenAI’s $40 billion raise led by SoftBank, valuing the company at $300 billion.
Combined with its recent buyouts like Rockset and Multi, the Windsurf acquisition would represent a clear push toward vertical integration.
The aim is probably to optimize every layer of the AI stack — from model development to deployment — and safeguard its position as a market leader amid rising competition.
Once the Windsurf deal closes, OpenAI will likely gain an aggressive foothold in the devtech space.
It could even potentially cannibalize parts of GitHub Copilot’s market share and set a precedent for AI labs acquiring specialized app layers.
Malay Parekh, CEO of Unico Connect, shares his perspective on what such a shift could mean for the future of developer technology:
"If OpenAI acquires Windsurf, it could significantly raise the bar for DevTech platforms by embedding deep AI-native capabilities into developer tools. For agencies like ours, building developer-focused platforms, this signals a shift toward more intelligent, context-aware tooling that simplifies and accelerates software creation.
It pushes all of us to think not just about enabling developers, but about augmenting their workflows with smarter suggestions, automation, and AI-driven architecture decisions."
Polymarket traders are predicting that OpenAI acquires Windsurf before August. 👀 pic.twitter.com/PiKM0GrMmx
— Jack Forge (@TheJackForge) April 16, 2025
As the AI devtech race accelerates, M&A is becoming a strategic lever for firms looking to consolidate talent, proprietary tooling, and infrastructure capabilities.
Other tech giants and startups may fast-track acquisitions to secure infrastructure and niche capabilities.
Agencies and enterprise buyers should monitor this space closely to align partnerships with emerging winners.
OpenAI's acquisition of a coding assistant company also shows how infrastructure efficiency is becoming a strategic asset.
SaaS platforms and tech vendors must therefore prioritize cost-aware AI model deployment to remain scalable and margin-positive in the long term.
Meanwhile, OpenAI recently launched a new image generator for its GPT-4o model, taking on Adobe Photoshop and Canva with better control over visual composition.