Cursor announced the general availability of Organizations, a new enterprise management framework designed to help large companies manage multiple teams, business units, and subsidiaries from a centralized administrative platform.
The new structure addresses growing demand from enterprise customers seeking greater control over budgets, security policies, governance, and feature access across different groups within their organizations. With Organizations, administrators can manage multiple Cursor teams from a single dashboard, set separate spending limits, configure model access for different user groups, create testing environments, and monitor usage analytics across the entire company.
Under the new hierarchy, Organizations serve as the top-level administrative layer, providing centralized control over company identity, membership, and configuration. Teams operate beneath the organization level and can maintain independent security settings, budgets, and feature controls. Cursor has also introduced Groups, lightweight collections of users that can span multiple teams and enable customized model access, spending limits, and agent permissions without requiring separate team structures.
According to Cursor, many enterprise customers are using the new capabilities to create sandbox environments where selected users can test new features before broader deployment. The structure also allows users to belong to multiple teams simultaneously, enabling organizations to maintain separate testing and production environments while preserving a unified user experience.
The platform is also being used to segment access to AI models and autonomous agent capabilities. Engineering and product teams can be granted access to advanced frontier models and automated agent functions, while departments such as finance, marketing, and sales can operate under stricter controls and lower spending thresholds.
Organizations also introduces centralized analytics that allow administrators to monitor spending and token usage across teams, users, service accounts, and cloud agents. The functionality supports internal chargeback models and cost allocation across business units while preserving team-level administrative visibility.
To simplify enterprise deployment, identity provider integrations and SCIM directory synchronization can now be configured once at the organization level and reused across teams and groups. Administrators can manage memberships through the dashboard, APIs, or CSV imports, with permissions and settings automatically applied when users join specific teams.
Cursor said future enhancements will focus on additional policy controls, streamlined onboarding, SCIM-driven user assignment, and more flexible ways to manage subsets of users without requiring separate team structures.
KEY QUOTE:
“We have set up a separate staging team that tries out new Cursor features before they are released broadly to all our engineers. We have another team where agents can run commands on auto-run without manual approval. Keeping those environments distinct under one organization lets us move quickly and adopt new capabilities without sacrificing control.”
Wendy Tang, Staff Software Engineer, AI Solutions Engineering, NVIDIA

