If they don’t refund the amount, i’m willing to file a class action lawsuit for malpractice and consumer law violations (false advertising)
Cursor, as soon as a serious competitor shows up, I’m out of here and you won’t see me again—so you learn to always be transparent and not make under-the-table moves. For now, I’ll be worse off; I think your days are numbered, because I promise you that once a serious competitor comes along, we’ll vanish.
A furious user
I’ve noticed that the latest Cursor pricing documentationn Cursor – Models & Pricing no longer includes information about local rate limits that were previously mentioned to refresh every 5-24 hours on a best-effort basis.
Looking at the current pricing documentation at Cursor – Models & Pricing , there’s no longer any explanation about local rate limits.
However, checking the archived version from several days ago (Cursor – Models & Pricing), it previously stated:
After you’ve hit your monthly limit, we grant additional local usage limits on a best-effort basis every 5 - 24 hours.
Additional observation: I notice the post was recently updated today, and I can no longer see the previous explanation about local rate limits (I believe I saw this information earlier, either in the original blog announcement or in this discussion thread).
For reference, this is the previous post Clarifying Cursor Pro Pricing - #49 by ericzakariasson that still has the explanation about the local rate limits:
Could you clarify what this change means? Does this indicate that local usage limits have been completely removed?
This is confusing for paying users, as the documentation keeps changing even during ongoing clarifications. The new pricing structure seems unclear and vague - could you provide more transparency about how it actually works?
Thank you
Hey!
On local limits:
Since these are only provided on a best-effort basis, we chose not to include them to avoid setting false expectations. Because they aren’t consistently reliable, we felt it would be clearer to omit them entirely and reduce potential confusion. That said, you’ll always see a warning when limits are hit.
On post edits:
Discourse (our forum platform) automatically adds tags to posts, which can make it appear as though edits were made. No manual changes have been made