#1Cursor★ Buy· starter★ 4.7 · 412 reviews AI-first code editor — understands your entire codebase, writes and debugs alongside you.
The default AI IDE, for better and worse
Cursor has become the de facto AI-native editor for a reason: Tab completion and Composer genuinely change how engineers work. The pricing is defensible, but the VS Code fork creates real lock-in risk.
Prompt-to-full-stack web app — AI builds, runs, and deploys React/Next.js apps right in the browser.
Full-stack prompt-to-app, rough edges included
Bolt.new delivers on the "prompt a full-stack app in the browser" promise better than most competitors. But token burn is high and the output has a ceiling that arrives faster than the marketing suggests.
#3Windsurf★ Evaluate· free★ 4.7 · 62 reviews Agentic AI IDE — takes multi-step actions autonomously to write, debug, and ship code.
Cursor's closest competitor, one lap behind
Windsurf (Codeium's IDE) is the serious alternative to Cursor, with real advantages on Cascade agent workflows. But the broader ecosystem and ship velocity keep it in Cursor's shadow.
#4Replit★ Evaluate· starter★ 4.6 · 154 reviews Browser-based IDE with AI agent — build, deploy, and host full apps without leaving the tab.
From browser IDE to agent-first platform
Replit Agent 2 has pushed Replit ahead of the pure in-browser IDE category. But serious developers still hit its limits, and it's not the right choice if you don't need the hosted/always-on piece.
Free AI coding assistant — autocomplete, chat, and an agent (Windsurf) with a generous free tier.
Open-source AI pair programmer for the terminal — edits your local repo with git-native commits.
Enterprise AI coding assistant — code-aware AI with access to your entire codebase, including monorepos.
Privacy-first AI code assistant — runs fully on-premises. The enterprise choice.
Not sure which alternative fits?
Describe your situation. The advisor reads your goals, constraints, and existing stack — then names 3 of the above with honest tradeoffs.
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