300% Retention and a Billion Dollar Run Rate
Amjad Masad took the stage at TechCrunch’s StrictlyVC event with a clear message: Replit is not Cursor. While the rival AI coding assistant reportedly burns cash at negative 23% gross margins and is reportedly selling to SpaceX for $60 billion, Masad claims Replit has been gross margin positive for over a year and is tracking toward a billion dollar annual run rate. He boasted net revenue retention hitting 300% in some cases, arguing that Replit’s full stack approach (from prompt to deployed app) creates stickier relationships than competitors. Masad dismissed the notion that prototypes inevitably get rebuilt into a company’s existing stack, claiming that when engineers try to rip out Replit’s infrastructure they often make things worse. Customers like Bain & Company have reportedly replaced Tableau and Power BI with Replit and Databricks, and enterprises spending $100,000 a month are seeing returns of $2 million to $10 million.
Apple’s ‘Lie’ and the War Over App Store Control
Masad did not mince words about Apple’s months long blockade of Replit’s iOS app updates. He called Apple’s stated justification (that Replit downloads new code after approval) ‘a lie’ and claimed he could prove it in court if necessary. The real motive, he suggested, is that Replit launched iOS app generation in December, and Apple feels threatened by a platform that lets non technical users create apps outside Xcode. Meanwhile, rival Lovable just got an app building app approved by the App Store. Masad portrayed Replit as the underdog standing up to a gatekeeper: ‘You can’t run a marketplace that a billion people have access to and make decisions that are discriminatory.’ He also noted that losing the iOS app entirely wouldn’t materially hurt Replit’s business, framing the fight as a matter of principle rather than survival.
The Unspoken IPO Pipeline and a Stark Warning
Masad revealed that Replit is considering investing in its own customers for equity, mirroring a strategy used by Nvidia and OpenAI. He pointed to Magic School, a teacher founded startup that built on Replit and made $20 million in its first year, and other Replit born companies now valued at half a billion dollars. With Stripe integration driving triple digit monthly growth in transaction volume, Masad mused that ‘soon our customers will be making more revenue than we are.’ The subtext is clear: Replit is positioning itself as a venture studio and acquisition pipeline, not just a dev tool. But his critique of Cursor’s economics serves as a sharp warning for AI companies that prioritize growth over unit economics. As foundation model costs rise and venture capital tightens, Masad’s punchline is undeniable: independence is a luxury that only the profitable can afford.
Source: Techcrunch
