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Updated April 2026

Cursor ($20/mo) vs Cline (Free):
The Real Cost Comparison

Cline is free. But free is misleading. Cline requires API keys, and running Claude Sonnet through Cline costs $5 to $15 per day in tokens for active developers. Heavy users report $200 to $500 per month in API bills. Cursor's $20 per month flat rate is actually cheaper for most developers who code more than an hour per day.

The Illusion of Free

Cline is an open-source AI coding assistant that runs as a VS Code extension. The tool itself is completely free. But it does nothing without API keys. You need to provide your own keys from Anthropic (Claude), OpenAI (GPT-4o), Google (Gemini), or another provider. Every AI request goes directly through that API and you pay the provider at their standard token rates.

This means Cline's actual cost depends entirely on how much you use it and which models you choose. A single complex Claude Sonnet request with a large context window can cost $0.10 to $0.50 in tokens. Multiply that across 100 or more requests per day and the bills add up fast.

Community reports on Reddit and developer forums consistently show moderate-to-heavy Cline users spending $50 to $200 per month on API bills. Power users (those running agentic workflows with Claude for several hours daily) report monthly bills of $300 to $500 or more. At those levels, Cursor's $20 flat rate is dramatically cheaper.

Cost Modelling: Cline API Bills vs Cursor Pro

Estimated monthly costs based on usage intensity and primary model choice. Cursor Pro is $20 per month with unlimited Auto mode. Cline costs are API bills at published provider rates.

Usage ProfileModelRequests/moCline CostCursor ProWinner
Light (< 30 min AI/day)Gemini 2.5 Pro~130$5/mo$20/moCline
Light (< 30 min AI/day)Claude Sonnet~130$12/mo$20/moCline
Moderate (1-2 hrs AI/day)Gemini 2.5 Pro~530$19/mo$20/moTie
Moderate (1-2 hrs AI/day)Claude Sonnet~530$47/mo$20/moCursor
Heavy (3-4 hrs AI/day)Gemini 2.5 Pro~970$35/mo$20/moCursor
Heavy (3-4 hrs AI/day)Claude Sonnet~970$86/mo$20/moCursor
Power (6+ hrs AI/day)Claude Sonnet~1450$129/mo$20/moCursor
Power (6+ hrs AI/day)Mixed models~1450$73/mo$20/moCursor

Estimates based on median token usage per request (approximately 1,500 input + 800 output tokens) and 22 working days per month. Cursor's $20 figure reflects the credit pool for manual model selection. Auto mode (unlimited, free) handles 70-80% of requests on top of this. Actual API costs vary with context window size and response length.

When Cline Is Genuinely Cheaper

Cline has real cost advantages in specific scenarios. Do not dismiss it based on the heavy-user numbers above if your usage fits one of these patterns:

  • Light usage: under 30 minutes of active AI interaction per day. At this level, your API bill stays under $10 per month with most models, which is half of Cursor Pro.
  • Cheap model preference: if you primarily use Gemini 2.5 Pro or GPT-4.1 (the cheapest capable models), your per-request cost drops significantly and the break-even point shifts higher.
  • Overflow use: some developers use Cursor as their primary tool and Cline as a backup for when their Cursor credit pool runs out mid-month.
  • Open source preference: some developers prefer Cline because it is fully open source, giving complete transparency into how their code is processed.
  • No subscription commitment: Cline has no monthly subscription. Use it for a week, stop for a month, use it again. You only pay for what you consume.
  • Specific model versions: Cline lets you use any model version from any provider, including fine-tuned models and local models. Cursor limits you to their supported model list.

When Cursor Is the Better Deal

For the majority of professional developers, Cursor Pro at $20 per month is cheaper than Cline's actual cost. Here is when Cursor clearly wins:

  • Moderate to heavy usage: once you exceed roughly 30 to 60 minutes of daily AI interaction, Cursor's flat rate beats Cline's variable API bills.
  • Claude Sonnet preference: if Claude is your primary model, the break-even is just 225 requests per month (about 10 per working day). Most developers exceed this easily.
  • Predictable budgeting: Cursor's $20 per month is fixed. Cline's cost varies day to day. For developers (and especially teams) who need predictable costs, the subscription model wins.
  • Auto mode advantage: 70 to 80 percent of your Cursor requests happen through unlimited Auto mode at zero cost. Cline charges for every single request regardless of model selection.
  • Built-in features: Cursor includes tab completions, Composer, codebase indexing, and cloud agents in the subscription. With Cline, you get the AI but not the IDE features.
  • No API key management: Cursor handles all model access through your subscription. Cline requires setting up and managing API keys with each provider separately.

The Hidden Costs of "Free"

Unpredictable Monthly Bills

Cline users often describe 'bill shock' when a heavy coding session generates hundreds of API requests. A single day of intensive agent use with Claude can cost $15 to $30 in tokens.

No Spending Limits

Most API providers do not have built-in spending caps. You can set billing alerts but there is no automatic shutoff. A runaway agent loop can drain hundreds of dollars before you notice.

Context Window Costs

Large codebases mean large context windows. A single Claude Sonnet request with a full project context can cost $0.25 to $0.50 in tokens. Cursor handles context optimisation automatically.

No Auto Mode Equivalent

Cursor's unlimited Auto mode handles 70 to 80 percent of requests at zero cost. Cline charges for every request regardless. This is the single biggest cost difference between the two tools.

API Key Management

Setting up and rotating API keys across multiple providers adds complexity. Each provider has different billing cycles, rate limits, and dashboard interfaces to monitor.

No Built-In Features

Cline provides AI chat and code generation but not tab completions, codebase indexing, Composer, or cloud agents. You may need additional VS Code extensions to match Cursor's feature set.

Cursor vs Cline FAQ

Is Cline really free?
Cline itself is free and open source. But it requires API keys from providers like Anthropic, OpenAI, or Google to function. You pay the API provider directly for every request. For light users (under 30 minutes of AI interaction per day), this can be cheaper than Cursor at $3 to $8 per month. For moderate to heavy users, API bills routinely reach $100 to $500 per month, making Cursor's $20 flat rate significantly cheaper.
How much does Cline actually cost per month?
It depends entirely on your usage and model choice. Light usage (under 30 minutes of AI per day) with Gemini costs roughly $3 to $8 per month. Moderate usage (1 to 3 hours) with Claude Sonnet costs $15 to $60 per month. Heavy usage (4+ hours of active AI interaction) with Claude Sonnet costs $100 to $500 or more per month. Many heavy Cline users report being surprised by bills exceeding $200.
Why would anyone use Cline if Cursor is cheaper?
Cline offers advantages that Cursor does not. It is open source (full transparency), works as a VS Code extension (no separate editor needed), gives you complete control over model selection and API keys, has no subscription commitment (pay only for what you use), and offers maximum flexibility for developers who want to customise their AI workflow. For light users, it is genuinely cheaper than Cursor.
Can I use Cline and Cursor together?
Not simultaneously in the same editor, since Cline is a VS Code extension and Cursor is a VS Code fork. However, you could use Cursor as your primary editor (with its $20 credit pool and unlimited Auto mode) and switch to VS Code with Cline for specific tasks where you want to use a particular model via your own API key. Some developers use Cursor for daily work and Cline for overflow when their credit pool runs out.
What is the break-even point between Cursor and Cline?
If you use Claude Sonnet as your primary model, the break-even point is roughly 225 requests per month (about 10 per working day). Below that, Cline is cheaper. Above that, Cursor Pro at $20 per month is cheaper because you get 225 Claude requests from the credit pool PLUS unlimited Auto mode. If you use cheaper models like Gemini, the break-even point is higher at around 550 requests per month.