Uber burned through its entire 2026 AI tooling budget in just four months, the company’s CTO confirmed, and has now imposed a $1,500-per-employee monthly cap on each agentic coding tool — a hard limit that applies separately to Claude Code and Cursor. The reversal marks one of the most visible corporate pullbacks from the “use AI as much as possible” posture that dominated enterprise tech in late 2025.

What Uber’s AI Spending Cap Actually Means

According to reporting from Bloomberg and TechCrunch, the $1,500 monthly cap applies per tool, not per employee across all tools combined. An engineer using both Claude Code and Cursor has a separate $1,500 limit on each. Employees can request approval to exceed their standard allocation, but that exception process means the unlimited-use culture is effectively over.

The numbers behind the decision are striking. Per Uber’s own internal data:

  • 95% of Uber’s engineers use AI tools every month
  • ~10% of Uber’s code is now written and submitted by AI agents
  • The company ran internal leaderboards ranking employees by AI usage volume
  • Spending exceeded the full-year 2026 budget within the first four months

Uber also built an internal dashboard so individual employees can monitor their own tool usage across platforms — a signal that the company knew consumption was accelerating before the cap hit.

The ROI Question Nobody Wants to Answer

Uber COO Andrew Macdonald publicly voiced the dilemma during a podcast interview: “It’s very hard to draw a line” between AI usage and new consumer features. That admission is notable. When a company’s COO cannot quantify AI productivity returns from the inside, it reveals how early-stage the ROI picture still is even for tech-native enterprises spending at scale.

TechCrunch framed it bluntly in its coverage: “AI ROI has so far remained a largely theoretical phenomenon.” A Bain survey published in June 2026 aligned with that view, finding that AI tools are delivering less cost reduction than most firms originally predicted when they approved the budgets.

This matters beyond Uber. The company’s previous posture — unlimited AI use, competitive leaderboards, zero friction on adoption — was held up as a model for enterprise AI rollouts. The pivot to hard monthly caps suggests the model had a flaw: it assumed productivity gains would auto-justify spending, without a mechanism to verify that assumption at the team level.

What This Signals for Enterprise AI Budgeting

Uber is almost certainly not alone. The $1,500/month figure is likely to become a reference point for procurement conversations across the industry as other companies confront similar budget overruns. Claude Code and Cursor — the two tools explicitly named in Uber’s cap — are among the highest-consumption AI development tools in the market, with per-token costs that compound quickly at 95% engineering adoption.

💡 Our Take: Uber’s cap is less a story about AI failure and more a story about enterprise budgeting catching up with enterprise adoption speed. Companies that bought into AI tools at the “unlimited” stage are now discovering they need the same cost governance they apply to cloud compute. The tools aren’t going away — the free-for-all is.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Uber’s AI spending cap?

Uber has set a $1,500 per employee monthly limit on each agentic coding tool, as reported by Bloomberg. The cap applies separately to Claude Code and Cursor — it is not a combined cross-tool limit.

Why did Uber cap AI tool usage?

Uber’s CTO confirmed the company exhausted its entire 2026 AI tooling budget within the first four months of the year, forcing the company to impose usage limits to extend spending through the rest of 2026.

Which AI tools did Uber cap?

The confirmed tools are Anthropic’s Claude Code and Cursor, per Bloomberg and TechCrunch reporting. Both are agentic coding tools used widely across Uber’s engineering teams.

Can Uber employees exceed the $1,500 cap?

Yes, with approval. Employees can request permission to exceed their standard monthly limit, but this requires authorization rather than being automatic as it was under Uber’s previous unlimited-use policy.

Is Uber’s AI cap unusual?

It is one of the most public examples of a major tech company reversing an “unlimited AI” policy, but the underlying pressure — spending outpacing measurable ROI — is widely reported across enterprise AI buyers in 2026, per a June Bain survey.

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I am a software engineer, I have a passion for working with cutting-edge technologies and staying up-to-date with the latest developments in the field. In my articles, I share my knowledge and insights on a range of topics, including business software, how to set up tools, and the latest trends in the tech industry.

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