What is Cursor?

Cursor is an AI coding agent that helps write, edit, and understand code. Agent Analytics can track when it visits your website.

Category

AI Coding Agent
Fetches documentation and other resources to help build software

Expected Behavior

Cursor shows up while a developer is coding against something you publish, pulling docs, API references, and examples in quick runs of several pages within a few seconds. With many developers using it at once, those runs overlap into steady traffic rather than the quiet gaps a single user would leave. Either way, requests concentrate almost entirely on technical content.

Overview

Operated By xAI
Expected To Follow Robots.txt Yes
Insights Last Updated July 7, 2026

Robots.txt Blocked Percentage

0%
0% of top websites are blocking Cursor
Learn How →

Country of Origin

Singapore
Cursor normally visits From Singapore

Robots.txt Blocking Trend

As of July 7, 2026, 0% of top websites block Cursor in their robots.txt files.

Overall AI Coding Agent Traffic

As of July 7, 2026, 0.0% of all web traffic came from AI coding agents.

Top Visited Website Categories

Finance
Computers and Electronics
Business and Industrial
News
Sports
Track AI Coding Agents Visiting Your Website
Use Agent Analytics to get realtime visibility into visits from every crawler, scraper, and AI agent.

This data reflects agent visits measured across thousands of websites using Agent Analytics, combined with daily scans of the world's top 1000 websites and their robots.txt files.

Cursor's User Agent

User Agent Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10_15_7) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Cursor/3.7.36 Chrome/142.0.7444.265 Electron/39.8.1 Safari/537.36

Access other known user agents and IP addresses using the Enterprise API.

How To Block Cursor

Add this rule to your robots.txt file to block Cursor from accessing your entire website. You can customize which pages are blocked by swapping out / for a different path.

User-agent: Cursor # https://knownagents.com/agents/cursor
Disallow: /
Block Every AI Coding Agent
⚠️ Manually adding individual robots.txt rules is not scalable. Instead, use Automatic Robots.txt.

Frequently Asked Questions

Should I Block Cursor?

Allow it if you publish documentation or technical content. Cursor fetches docs and code examples at the moment a developer needs them, so blocking it makes your product harder to build with. Search rankings are unaffected either way. Almost none of the top websites we track have robots.txt rules for Cursor right now.

Does Cursor Respect Robots.txt?

Yes. Cursor is expected to honor robots.txt rules, so a disallow rule is the right first move. Automatic Robots.txt adds and maintains that rule for you, and Agent Analytics confirms Cursor actually honors it.

Does Cursor Access Private Content?

Not on its own. Cursor reads public documentation, references, and code examples. It can only reach private resources if the developer using it supplies credentials on purpose.

Why Is Cursor Visiting My Website?

A developer somewhere is building against something you document. Cursor pulled your docs, API reference, or examples because they were relevant to the code being written at that moment.

How Can I Tell if Cursor Is Visiting My Website?

Agent Analytics tracks Cursor visits in real time alongside every other known AI agent, crawler, and scraper. You can also check your server logs for requests whose user agent string contains "Cursor". Look for bursts of requests to your documentation and reference pages. Keep in mind that Cursor doesn't publish a verification method, so any client can claim its user agent string and a log match is a hint rather than proof.

References