MCP connector
Claude's Model Context Protocol (MCP) connector feature enables you to connect to remote MCP servers directly from the Messages API without a separate MCP client.
Current version: This feature requires the beta header: "anthropic-beta": "mcp-client-2025-11-20"
The previous version (mcp-client-2025-04-04) is deprecated. See Deprecated version: mcp-client-2025-04-04.
This feature is not eligible for Zero Data Retention (ZDR). Data is retained according to the feature's standard retention policy.
Key features
- Direct API integration: Connect to MCP servers without implementing an MCP client
- Tool calling support: Access MCP tools through the Messages API
- Flexible tool configuration: Enable all tools, allowlist specific tools, or denylist unwanted tools
- Per-tool configuration: Configure individual tools with custom settings
- OAuth authentication: Support for OAuth Bearer tokens for authenticated servers
- Multiple servers: Connect to multiple MCP servers in a single request
Limitations
- Of the feature set of the MCP specification, only tool calls are currently supported.
- The server must be publicly exposed through HTTP (supports both Streamable HTTP and SSE transports). Local STDIO servers cannot be connected directly.
- The MCP connector is available on the Claude API, Claude Platform on AWS, and Microsoft Foundry. It is not currently available on Amazon Bedrock or Vertex AI.
Using the MCP connector in the Messages API
The MCP connector uses two components:
- MCP Server Definition (
mcp_serversarray): Defines server connection details (URL, authentication) - MCP Toolset (
toolsarray): Configures which tools to enable and how to configure them
Basic example
This example enables all tools from an MCP server with default configuration:
curl https://api.anthropic.com/v1/messages \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-H "X-API-Key: $ANTHROPIC_API_KEY" \
-H "anthropic-version: 2023-06-01" \
-H "anthropic-beta: mcp-client-2025-11-20" \
-d '{
"model": "claude-opus-4-7",
"max_tokens": 1000,
"messages": [{"role": "user", "content": "What tools do you have available?"}],
"mcp_servers": [
{
"type": "url",
"url": "https://example-server.modelcontextprotocol.io/sse",
"name": "example-mcp",
"authorization_token": "YOUR_TOKEN"
}
],
"tools": [
{
"type": "mcp_toolset",
"mcp_server_name": "example-mcp"
}
]
}'
ant beta:messages create --beta mcp-client-2025-11-20 <<'YAML'
model: claude-opus-4-7
max_tokens: 1000
messages:
- role: user
content: What tools do you have available?
mcp_servers:
- type: url
url: https://example-server.modelcontextprotocol.io/sse
name: example-mcp
authorization_token: YOUR_TOKEN
tools:
- type: mcp_toolset
mcp_server_name: example-mcp
YAML
import anthropic
client = anthropic.Anthropic()
response = client.beta.messages.create(
model="claude-opus-4-7",
max_tokens=1000,
messages=[{"role": "user", "content": "What tools do you have available?"}],
mcp_servers=[
{
"type": "url",
"url": "https://example-server.modelcontextprotocol.io/sse",
"name": "example-mcp",
"authorization_token": "YOUR_TOKEN",
}
],
tools=[{"type": "mcp_toolset", "mcp_server_name": "example-mcp"}],
betas=["mcp-client-2025-11-20"],
)
print(response)
import Anthropic from "@anthropic-ai/sdk";
const anthropic = new Anthropic();
const response = await anthropic.beta.messages.create({
model: "claude-opus-4-7",
max_tokens: 1000,
messages: [
{
role: "user",
content: "What tools do you have available?"
}
],
mcp_servers: [
{
type: "url",
url: "https://example-server.modelcontextprotocol.io/sse",
name: "example-mcp",
authorization_token: "YOUR_TOKEN"
}
],
tools: [
{
type: "mcp_toolset",
mcp_server_name: "example-mcp"
}
],
betas: ["mcp-client-2025-11-20"]
});
console.log(response);
using Anthropic;
using Anthropic.Models.Beta.Messages;
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Threading.Tasks;
AnthropicClient client = new();
var parameters = new MessageCreateParams
{
Model = Model.ClaudeOpus4_7,
MaxTokens = 1000,
Messages = new List<BetaMessageParam>
{
new() { Role = Role.User, Content = "What tools do you have available?" }
},
McpServers = new List<BetaRequestMcpServerUrlDefinition>
{
new()
{
Url = "https://example-server.modelcontextprotocol.io/sse",
Name = "example-mcp",
AuthorizationToken = "YOUR_TOKEN"
}
},
Tools = new List<BetaToolUnion>
{
new BetaMcpToolset("example-mcp")
},
Betas = new List<string> { "mcp-client-2025-11-20" }
};
var message = await client.Beta.Messages.Create(parameters);
Console.WriteLine(message);
package main
import (
"context"
"fmt"
"log"
"github.com/anthropics/anthropic-sdk-go"
)
func main() {
client := anthropic.NewClient()
response, err := client.Beta.Messages.New(context.TODO(), anthropic.BetaMessageNewParams{
Model: anthropic.ModelClaudeOpus4_7,
MaxTokens: 1000,
Messages: []anthropic.BetaMessageParam{
anthropic.NewBetaUserMessage(anthropic.NewBetaTextBlock("What tools do you have available?")),
},
MCPServers: []anthropic.BetaRequestMCPServerURLDefinitionParam{
{
URL: "https://example-server.modelcontextprotocol.io/sse",
Name: "example-mcp",
AuthorizationToken: anthropic.String("YOUR_TOKEN"),
},
},
Tools: []anthropic.BetaToolUnionParam{
{OfMCPToolset: &anthropic.BetaMCPToolsetParam{
MCPServerName: "example-mcp",
}},
},
Betas: []anthropic.AnthropicBeta{
anthropic.AnthropicBetaMCPClient2025_11_20,
},
})
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
fmt.Println(response)
}
import com.anthropic.client.AnthropicClient;
import com.anthropic.client.okhttp.AnthropicOkHttpClient;
import com.anthropic.models.beta.messages.BetaMcpToolset;
import com.anthropic.models.beta.messages.BetaMessage;
import com.anthropic.models.beta.messages.BetaRequestMcpServerUrlDefinition;
import com.anthropic.models.beta.messages.MessageCreateParams;
import com.anthropic.models.messages.Model;
void main() {
AnthropicClient client = AnthropicOkHttpClient.fromEnv();
MessageCreateParams params = MessageCreateParams.builder()
.model(Model.CLAUDE_OPUS_4_7)
.maxTokens(1000L)
.addUserMessage("What tools do you have available?")
.addMcpServer(BetaRequestMcpServerUrlDefinition.builder()
.url("https://example-server.modelcontextprotocol.io/sse")
.name("example-mcp")
.authorizationToken("YOUR_TOKEN")
.build())
.addTool(BetaMcpToolset.builder()
.mcpServerName("example-mcp")
.build())
.addBeta("mcp-client-2025-11-20")
.build();
BetaMessage response = client.beta().messages().create(params);
IO.println(response);
}
<?php
use Anthropic\Client;
$client = new Client(apiKey: getenv("ANTHROPIC_API_KEY"));
$message = $client->beta->messages->create(
maxTokens: 1000,
messages: [
['role' => 'user', 'content' => 'What tools do you have available?']
],
model: 'claude-opus-4-7',
mcpServers: [
[
'type' => 'url',
'url' => 'https://example-server.modelcontextprotocol.io/sse',
'name' => 'example-mcp',
'authorization_token' => 'YOUR_TOKEN',
],
],
tools: [
[
'type' => 'mcp_toolset',
'mcp_server_name' => 'example-mcp',
],
],
betas: ['mcp-client-2025-11-20'],
);
echo $message;
require "anthropic"
client = Anthropic::Client.new
response = client.beta.messages.create(
model: "claude-opus-4-7",
max_tokens: 1000,
messages: [
{ role: "user", content: "What tools do you have available?" }
],
mcp_servers: [
{
type: "url",
url: "https://example-server.modelcontextprotocol.io/sse",
name: "example-mcp",
authorization_token: "YOUR_TOKEN"
}
],
tools: [
{
type: "mcp_toolset",
mcp_server_name: "example-mcp"
}
],
betas: ["mcp-client-2025-11-20"]
)
puts response
MCP server configuration
Each MCP server in the mcp_servers array defines the connection details:
{
"type": "url",
"url": "https://example-server.modelcontextprotocol.io/sse",
"name": "example-mcp",
"authorization_token": "YOUR_TOKEN"
}
Field descriptions
| Property | Type | Required | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
type | string | Yes | Currently only "url" is supported. |
url | string | Yes | The URL of the MCP server. Must start with https://. |
name | string | Yes | A unique identifier for this MCP server. Must be referenced by exactly one MCPToolset in the tools array. |
authorization_token | string | No | OAuth authorization token if required by the MCP server. See MCP specification. |
MCP toolset configuration
The MCPToolset lives in the tools array and configures which tools from the MCP server are enabled and how they should be configured.
Basic structure
{
"type": "mcp_toolset",
"mcp_server_name": "example-mcp",
"default_config": {
"enabled": true,
"defer_loading": false
},
"configs": {
"specific_tool_name": {
"enabled": true,
"defer_loading": true
}
}
}
Field descriptions
| Property | Type | Required | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
type | string | Yes | Must be "mcp_toolset". |
mcp_server_name | string | Yes | Must match a server name defined in the mcp_servers array. |
default_config | object | No | Default configuration applied to all tools in this set. Individual tool configs in configs override these defaults. |
configs | object | No | Per-tool configuration overrides. Keys are tool names, values are configuration objects. |
cache_control | object | No | Prompt caching cache breakpoint configuration for this toolset. |
Tool configuration options
Each tool (whether configured in default_config or in configs) supports the following fields:
| Property | Type | Default | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
enabled | boolean | true | Whether this tool is enabled. |
defer_loading | boolean | false | If true, tool description is not sent to the model initially. Used with Tool search tool. |
For the full directory of Anthropic-provided tools and optional properties such as defer_loading, see the Tool reference. For searching across large tool sets, see Tool search tool.
Configuration merging
Configuration values merge with this precedence (highest to lowest):
- Tool-specific settings in
configs - Set-level
default_config - System defaults
Example:
{
"type": "mcp_toolset",
"mcp_server_name": "google-calendar-mcp",
"default_config": {
"defer_loading": true
},
"configs": {
"search_events": {
"enabled": false
}
}
}
Results in:
search_events:enabled: false(from configs),defer_loading: true(from default_config)- All other tools:
enabled: true(system default),defer_loading: true(from default_config)
Common configuration patterns
Enable all tools with default configuration
The simplest pattern - enable all tools from a server:
{
"type": "mcp_toolset",
"mcp_server_name": "google-calendar-mcp"
}
Allowlist: enable only specific tools
Set enabled: false as the default, then explicitly enable specific tools:
{
"type": "mcp_toolset",
"mcp_server_name": "google-calendar-mcp",
"default_config": {
"enabled": false
},
"configs": {
"search_events": {
"enabled": true
},
"create_event": {
"enabled": true
}
}
}
Denylist: disable specific tools
Enable all tools by default, then explicitly disable unwanted tools:
{
"type": "mcp_toolset",
"mcp_server_name": "google-calendar-mcp",
"configs": {
"delete_all_events": {
"enabled": false
},
"share_calendar_publicly": {
"enabled": false
}
}
}
Mixed: allowlist with per-tool configuration
Combine allowlisting with custom configuration for each tool:
{
"type": "mcp_toolset",
"mcp_server_name": "google-calendar-mcp",
"default_config": {
"enabled": false,
"defer_loading": true
},
"configs": {
"search_events": {
"enabled": true,
"defer_loading": false
},
"list_events": {
"enabled": true
}
}
}
In this example:
search_eventsis enabled withdefer_loading: falselist_eventsis enabled withdefer_loading: true(inherited from default_config)- All other tools are disabled
Validation rules
The API enforces these validation rules:
- Server must exist: The
mcp_server_namein an MCPToolset must match a server defined in themcp_serversarray - Server must be used: Every MCP server defined in
mcp_serversmust be referenced by exactly one MCPToolset - Unique toolset per server: Each MCP server can only be referenced by one MCPToolset
- Unknown tool names: If a tool name in
configsdoesn't exist on the MCP server, a backend warning is logged but no error is returned (MCP servers may have dynamic tool availability)
Response content types
When Claude uses MCP tools, the response includes two new content block types:
MCP tool use block
{
"type": "mcp_tool_use",
"id": "mcptoolu_014Q35RayjACSWkSj4X2yov1",
"name": "echo",
"server_name": "example-mcp",
"input": { "param1": "value1", "param2": "value2" }
}
MCP tool result block
{
"type": "mcp_tool_result",
"tool_use_id": "mcptoolu_014Q35RayjACSWkSj4X2yov1",
"is_error": false,
"content": [
{
"type": "text",
"text": "Hello"
}
]
}
Multiple MCP servers
You can connect to multiple MCP servers by including multiple server definitions in mcp_servers and a corresponding MCPToolset for each in the tools array:
{
"model": "claude-opus-4-7",
"max_tokens": 1000,
"messages": [
{
"role": "user",
"content": "Use tools from both mcp-server-1 and mcp-server-2 to complete this task"
}
],
"mcp_servers": [
{
"type": "url",
"url": "https://mcp.example1.com/sse",
"name": "mcp-server-1",
"authorization_token": "TOKEN1"
},
{
"type": "url",
"url": "https://mcp.example2.com/sse",
"name": "mcp-server-2",
"authorization_token": "TOKEN2"
}
],
"tools": [
{
"type": "mcp_toolset",
"mcp_server_name": "mcp-server-1"
},
{
"type": "mcp_toolset",
"mcp_server_name": "mcp-server-2",
"default_config": {
"defer_loading": true
}
}
]
}
Authentication
For MCP servers that require OAuth authentication, you'll need to obtain an access token. The MCP connector beta supports passing an authorization_token parameter in the MCP server definition.
API consumers are expected to handle the OAuth flow and obtain the access token prior to making the API call, and to refresh the token as needed.
Obtaining an access token for testing
The MCP inspector can guide you through the process of obtaining an access token for testing purposes.
-
Run the inspector with the following command. You need Node.js installed on your machine.
npx @modelcontextprotocol/inspector -
In the sidebar on the left, for "Transport type", select either "SSE" or "Streamable HTTP".
-
Enter the URL of the MCP server.
-
In the right area, click the "Open Auth Settings" button after "Need to configure authentication?".
-
Click "Quick OAuth Flow" and authorize on the OAuth screen.
-
Follow the steps in the "OAuth Flow Progress" section of the inspector and click "Continue" until you reach "Authentication complete".
-
Copy the
access_tokenvalue. -
Paste it into the
authorization_tokenfield in your MCP server configuration.
Using the access token
Once you've obtained an access token using either of the preceding OAuth flows, you can use it in your MCP server configuration:
{
"mcp_servers": [
{
"type": "url",
"url": "https://example-server.modelcontextprotocol.io/sse",
"name": "authenticated-server",
"authorization_token": "YOUR_ACCESS_TOKEN_HERE"
}
]
}
For detailed explanations of the OAuth flow, refer to the Authorization section in the MCP specification.
Client-side MCP helpers (TypeScript)
If you manage your own MCP client connection (for example, with local stdio servers, MCP prompts, or MCP resources), the TypeScript SDK provides helper functions that convert between MCP types and Claude API types. This eliminates manual conversion code when using the MCP SDK alongside the Anthropic SDK.
These helpers are currently available in the TypeScript SDK only.
Use the mcp_servers API parameter when you have remote servers accessible by URL and only need tool support. Use the client-side helpers when you need local servers, prompts, resources, or more control over the connection with the base SDK.
Installation
Install both the Anthropic SDK and the MCP SDK:
npm install @anthropic-ai/sdk @modelcontextprotocol/sdk
Available helpers
Import the helpers from the beta namespace:
import {
mcpTools,
mcpMessages,
mcpResourceToContent,
mcpResourceToFile
} from "@anthropic-ai/sdk/helpers/beta/mcp";
| Helper | Description |
|---|---|
mcpTools(tools, mcpClient) | Converts MCP tools to Claude API tools for use with client.beta.messages.toolRunner() |
mcpMessages(messages) | Converts MCP prompt messages to Claude API message format |
mcpResourceToContent(resource) | Converts an MCP resource to a Claude API content block |
mcpResourceToFile(resource) | Converts an MCP resource to a file object for upload |
Use MCP tools
Convert MCP tools for use with the SDK's tool runner, which handles tool execution automatically:
import Anthropic from "@anthropic-ai/sdk";
import { mcpTools } from "@anthropic-ai/sdk/helpers/beta/mcp";
import { Client } from "@modelcontextprotocol/sdk/client/index.js";
import { StdioClientTransport } from "@modelcontextprotocol/sdk/client/stdio.js";
const anthropic = new Anthropic();
// Connect to an MCP server
const transport = new StdioClientTransport({ command: "mcp-server", args: [] });
const mcpClient = new Client({ name: "my-client", version: "1.0.0" });
await mcpClient.connect(transport);
// List tools and convert them for the Claude API
const { tools } = await mcpClient.listTools();
const finalMessage = await anthropic.beta.messages.toolRunner({
model: "claude-opus-4-7",
max_tokens: 1024,
messages: [{ role: "user", content: "What tools do you have available?" }],
tools: mcpTools(tools, mcpClient)
});
console.log(finalMessage);
Use MCP prompts
Convert MCP prompt messages into Claude API message format:
import { mcpMessages } from "@anthropic-ai/sdk/helpers/beta/mcp";
const { messages } = await mcpClient.getPrompt({ name: "my-prompt" });
const response = await anthropic.beta.messages.create({
model: "claude-opus-4-7",
max_tokens: 1024,
messages: mcpMessages(messages)
});
console.log(response);
Use MCP resources
Convert MCP resources into content blocks to include in messages, or into file objects for upload:
import { mcpResourceToContent, mcpResourceToFile } from "@anthropic-ai/sdk/helpers/beta/mcp";
// As a content block in a message
const resource = await mcpClient.readResource({ uri: "file:///path/to/doc.txt" });
await anthropic.beta.messages.create({
model: "claude-opus-4-7",
max_tokens: 1024,
messages: [
{
role: "user",
content: [
mcpResourceToContent(resource),
{ type: "text", text: "Summarize this document" }
]
}
]
});
// As a file upload
const fileResource = await mcpClient.readResource({ uri: "file:///path/to/data.json" });
await anthropic.beta.files.upload({ file: mcpResourceToFile(fileResource) });
Error handling
The conversion functions throw UnsupportedMCPValueError if an MCP value isn't supported by the Claude API. This can happen with unsupported content types, MIME types, or non-HTTP resource links.
Data retention
The MCP connector is not covered by ZDR arrangements. Data exchanged with MCP servers, including tool definitions and execution results, is retained according to Anthropic's standard data retention policy.
For ZDR eligibility across all features, see API and data retention.
Migration guide
If you're using the deprecated mcp-client-2025-04-04 beta header, follow this guide to migrate to the new version.
Key changes
- New beta header: Change from
mcp-client-2025-04-04tomcp-client-2025-11-20 - Tool configuration moved: Tool configuration now lives in the
toolsarray as MCPToolset objects, not in the MCP server definition - More flexible configuration: New pattern supports allowlisting, denylisting, and per-tool configuration
Migration steps
Before (deprecated):
{
"model": "claude-opus-4-7",
"max_tokens": 1000,
"messages": [
// ...
],
"mcp_servers": [
{
"type": "url",
"url": "https://mcp.example.com/sse",
"name": "example-mcp",
"authorization_token": "YOUR_TOKEN",
"tool_configuration": {
"enabled": true,
"allowed_tools": ["tool1", "tool2"]
}
}
]
}
After (current):
{
"model": "claude-opus-4-7",
"max_tokens": 1000,
"messages": [
// ...
],
"mcp_servers": [
{
"type": "url",
"url": "https://mcp.example.com/sse",
"name": "example-mcp",
"authorization_token": "YOUR_TOKEN"
}
],
"tools": [
{
"type": "mcp_toolset",
"mcp_server_name": "example-mcp",
"default_config": {
"enabled": false
},
"configs": {
"tool1": {
"enabled": true
},
"tool2": {
"enabled": true
}
}
}
]
}
Common migration patterns
| Old pattern | New pattern |
|---|---|
No tool_configuration (all tools enabled) | MCPToolset with no default_config or configs |
tool_configuration.enabled: false | MCPToolset with default_config.enabled: false |
tool_configuration.allowed_tools: [...] | MCPToolset with default_config.enabled: false and specific tools enabled in configs |
Deprecated version: mcp-client-2025-04-04
This version is deprecated. Migrate to mcp-client-2025-11-20 using the preceding migration guide.
The previous version of the MCP connector included tool configuration directly in the MCP server definition:
{
"mcp_servers": [
{
"type": "url",
"url": "https://example-server.modelcontextprotocol.io/sse",
"name": "example-mcp",
"authorization_token": "YOUR_TOKEN",
"tool_configuration": {
"enabled": true,
"allowed_tools": ["example_tool_1", "example_tool_2"]
}
}
]
}
Deprecated field descriptions
| Property | Type | Description |
|---|---|---|
tool_configuration | object | Deprecated: Use MCPToolset in the tools array instead |
tool_configuration.enabled | boolean | Deprecated: Use default_config.enabled in MCPToolset |
tool_configuration.allowed_tools | array | Deprecated: Use allowlist pattern with configs in MCPToolset |