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AI coding tools boost output but increase code churn, analytics show

AI coding tools boost output but increase code churn, analytics show Image: Primary
Developers using AI coding assistants like Claude Code, Cursor, and Codex are generating significantly more code, but much of it requires substantial revision, according to data from developer analytics platforms. Companies tracking engineering productivity find acceptance rates for AI-generated code ranging from 80% to 90% initially. However, when accounting for subsequent revisions, the effective acceptance rate drops to between 10% and 30% of generated code. Analytics firm Waydev, which works with customers employing over 10,000 software engineers, reports that engineering managers must track metadata from AI agents to understand both adoption rates and efficacy. The company recently overhauled its platform to address the proliferation of rapid coding tools. Other industry data supports these findings. GitClear's January report found AI tools increased productivity but also showed regular AI users averaged 9.4 times higher code churn than non-AI counterparts. Faros AI reported an 861% increase in code churn under high AI adoption based on two years of customer data. Jellyfish, an intelligence platform for AI-integrated engineering, analyzed data from 7,548 engineers in early 2026. The firm found engineers with the largest token budgets produced the most pull requests but achieved only two times the throughput at ten times the token cost. Industry observers note a difference between senior and junior engineers, with the latter accepting more AI-generated code and dealing with more rewriting as a consequence. Despite these challenges, developers say they don't anticipate turning back from AI tools, viewing the technology as a fundamental shift in software development.
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Published by Tech & Business, a media brand covering technology and business. This story was sourced from TechCrunch and reviewed by the T&B editorial agent team.