MCP Apps
Build interactive UIs for MCP tools — charts, forms, dashboards — that render inline in Claude, ChatGPT and any other compliant chat client.
Why
·
Quickstart
·
API Docs
·
Spec
·
Contributing
Excalidraw built with MCP Apps, running in Claude
Table of Contents
Build with Agent Skills
The fastest way to build an MCP App is to let your AI coding agent do it. This
repo ships four Agent Skills — install them once,
then just ask:
create-mcp-app | Scaffolds a new MCP App with an interactive UI from scratch | "Create an MCP App" |
migrate-oai-app | Converts an existing OpenAI App to use MCP Apps | "Migrate from OpenAI Apps SDK" |
add-app-to-server | Adds interactive UI to an existing MCP server's tools | "Add UI to my MCP server" |
convert-web-app | Turns an existing web app into a hybrid web + MCP App | "Add MCP App support to my web app" |
Install the Skills
Claude Code — install via the plugin marketplace:
/plugin marketplace add modelcontextprotocol/ext-apps
/plugin install mcp-apps@modelcontextprotocol-ext-apps
Other agents — any AI coding agent that supports
Agent Skills can use these skills. See the
agent skills guide for manual installation
instructions.
Once installed, verify by asking your agent "What skills do you have?" — you
should see create-mcp-app, migrate-oai-app, add-app-to-server, and
convert-web-app in the list. Then just ask it to create or migrate an app and
it will guide you through the rest.
Supported Clients
[!NOTE]
MCP Apps is an extension to the
core MCP specification. Host
support varies — see the
clients page for the full list.
Why MCP Apps?
MCP tools return text and structured data. That works for many cases, but not
when you need an interactive UI, like a chart, form, design canvas or video player.
MCP Apps provide a standardized way to deliver interactive UIs from MCP servers.
Your UI renders inline in the conversation, in context, in any compliant host.
How It Works
MCP Apps extend the Model Context Protocol by letting tools declare UI
resources:
- Tool definition — Your tool declares a
ui:// resource containing its
HTML interface
- Tool call — The LLM calls the tool on your server
- Host renders — The host fetches the resource and displays it in a
sandboxed iframe
- Bidirectional communication — The host passes tool data to the UI via
notifications, and the UI can call other tools through the host
Getting Started
npm install -S @modelcontextprotocol/ext-apps
New here? Start with the
Quickstart Guide
to build your first MCP App.
Using the SDK
The SDK serves three roles: app developers building interactive Views, host
developers embedding those Views, and MCP server authors registering tools with
UI metadata.
@modelcontextprotocol/ext-apps | Build interactive Views (App class, PostMessageTransport) | API Docs → |
@modelcontextprotocol/ext-apps/react | React hooks for Views (useApp, useHostStyles, etc.) | API Docs → |
@modelcontextprotocol/ext-apps/app-bridge | Embed and communicate with Views in your chat client | API Docs → |
@modelcontextprotocol/ext-apps/server | Register tools and resources on your MCP server | API Docs → |
There's no supported host implementation in this repo (beyond the
examples/basic-host
example).
The MCP-UI client SDK offers a
fully-featured MCP Apps framework used by a few hosts. Clients may choose to use
it or roll their own implementation.
Examples
The
examples/
directory contains demo apps showcasing real-world use cases.
Starter Templates
Running the Examples
With basic-host
To run all examples locally using
basic-host
(the reference host implementation included in this repo):
git clone https://github.com/modelcontextprotocol/ext-apps.git
cd ext-apps
npm install
npm start
Then open http://localhost:8080/.
With MCP Clients
Every Node.js example is published as @modelcontextprotocol/server-<name>. To
add one to an MCP client that supports stdio (Claude Desktop, VS Code, etc.),
use this pattern:
{
"mcpServers": {
"<name>": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "@modelcontextprotocol/server-<name>", "--stdio"]
}
}
}
For example, to add the map server: @modelcontextprotocol/server-map. The
Python examples (qr-server, say-server) use uv run instead — see their
READMEs for details.
Local Development
To test local modifications with an MCP client, clone the repo, install, then
point your client at a local build:
{
"mcpServers": {
"<name>": {
"command": "bash",
"args": [
"-c",
"cd ~/code/ext-apps/examples/<name>-server && npm run build >&2 && node dist/index.js --stdio"
]
}
}
}
Specification
Resources
Contributing
Contributions are welcome! Please read CONTRIBUTING.md for
guidelines on how to get started, submit pull requests, and report issues.