Cursor
AI-native code editor forked from VS Code that understands your entire codebase. Offers inline completions, multi-file edits, and chat powered by GPT-4, Claude, and other LLMs. Built for pro developers who want AI in every keystroke, not bolted on as a sidebar.
Replit
A cloud-based IDE that integrates an AI agent (Ghostwriter) to assist in coding, debugging, and deploying directly from the browser. It is a collaborative platform that handles devops automatically.
Cursor edges Replit on aggregate — 81 vs 81.
The AI code editor that made VS Code feel outdated overnight -- worth the $20/mo if you write code daily, overkill if you don't. Replit still wins for buyers who prioritise one-click deployment and hosting. Both tools are independently scored — the right pick depends on which dimensions matter most for your workflow.
Side-by-side, every cell sourced.
Pricing pulled from each tool's public site. Scores follow the BigBang Score rubric — pricing transparency, free tier, API support, update frequency, unique factor, documentation, and community.
Use-case picks.
Cut through the spec sheet. Here's what we'd recommend depending on what matters most.
Pick Cursor if…
You prioritise codebase-aware context and multiple model support.
Pick Replit if…
You prioritise one-click deployment and hosting and collaborative coding features.
Editorial pick
Cursor wins our composite score (81/100). It edges ahead on aggregate — but the right tool depends on which dimensions matter most.
Related head-to-heads in AI coding.
Cursor vs Aider — AI coding
BigBang Scores 81/100 vs 92/100. Pricing, capabilities, and editorial verdict inside.
Cursor vs Lovable — AI coding
BigBang Scores 81/100 vs 82/100. Pricing, capabilities, and editorial verdict inside.
Cursor vs Codeium — AI coding
BigBang Scores 81/100 vs 79/100. Pricing, capabilities, and editorial verdict inside.
Cursor vs Replit - frequently asked.
Direct answers tuned for AI search engines (ChatGPT, Perplexity, Claude) and Google's People Also Ask.
The short answer.
Cursor wins on aggregate, but Replit pulls ahead on specific axes - the spec sheet above shows where each one earns its keep.