GitHub - ChromeDevTools/chrome-devtools-mcp: Chrome DevTools for coding agents (original) (raw)

Chrome DevTools MCP

npm chrome-devtools-mcp package

chrome-devtools-mcp lets your coding agent (such as Gemini, Claude, Cursor or Copilot) control and inspect a live Chrome browser. It acts as a Model-Context-Protocol (MCP) server, giving your AI coding assistant access to the full power of Chrome DevTools for reliable automation, in-depth debugging, and performance analysis.

Tool reference | Changelog | Contributing | Troubleshooting | Design Principles

Key features

Disclaimers

chrome-devtools-mcp exposes content of the browser instance to the MCP clients allowing them to inspect, debug, and modify any data in the browser or DevTools. Avoid sharing sensitive or personal information that you don't want to share with MCP clients.

Requirements

Getting started

Add the following config to your MCP client:

{ "mcpServers": { "chrome-devtools": { "command": "npx", "args": ["-y", "chrome-devtools-mcp@latest"] } } }

Note

Using chrome-devtools-mcp@latest ensures that your MCP client will always use the latest version of the Chrome DevTools MCP server.

MCP Client configuration

Amp Follow https://ampcode.com/manual#mcp and use the config provided above. You can also install the Chrome DevTools MCP server using the CLI:

amp mcp add chrome-devtools -- npx chrome-devtools-mcp@latest

Antigravity

To use the Chrome DevTools MCP server follow the instructions from Antigravity's docs to install a custom MCP server. Add the following config to the MCP servers config:

{ "mcpServers": { "chrome-devtools": { "command": "npx", "args": [ "chrome-devtools-mcp@latest", "--browser-url=http://127.0.0.1:9222", "-y" ] } } }

This will make the Chrome DevTools MCP server automatically connect to the browser that Antigravity is using. If you are not using port 9222, make sure to adjust accordingly.

Chrome DevTools MCP will not start the browser instance automatically using this approach as as the Chrome DevTools MCP server runs in Antigravity's built-in browser. If the browser is not already running, you have to start it first by clicking the Chrome icon at the top right corner.

Claude Code Use the Claude Code CLI to add the Chrome DevTools MCP server (guide):

claude mcp add chrome-devtools npx chrome-devtools-mcp@latest

Cline Follow https://docs.cline.bot/mcp/configuring-mcp-servers and use the config provided above. Codex Follow the configure MCP guide using the standard config from above. You can also install the Chrome DevTools MCP server using the Codex CLI:

codex mcp add chrome-devtools -- npx chrome-devtools-mcp@latest

On Windows 11

Configure the Chrome install location and increase the startup timeout by updating .codex/config.toml and adding the following env and startup_timeout_ms parameters:

[mcp_servers.chrome-devtools]
command = "cmd"
args = [
    "/c",
    "npx",
    "-y",
    "chrome-devtools-mcp@latest",
]
env = { SystemRoot="C:\\Windows", PROGRAMFILES="C:\\Program Files" }
startup_timeout_ms = 20_000

Copilot CLI

Start Copilot CLI:

Start the dialog to add a new MCP server by running:

Configure the following fields and press CTRL+S to save the configuration:

Click the button to install:

Install in VS Code

Install in VS Code Insiders

Or install manually:

Follow the MCP install guide, with the standard config from above. You can also install the Chrome DevTools MCP server using the VS Code CLI:

code --add-mcp '{"name":"io.github.ChromeDevTools/chrome-devtools-mcp","command":"npx","args":["-y","chrome-devtools-mcp"],"env":{}}'

Cursor

Click the button to install:

Install in Cursor

Or install manually:

Go to Cursor Settings -> MCP -> New MCP Server. Use the config provided above.

Factory CLIUse the Factory CLI to add the Chrome DevTools MCP server (guide):

droid mcp add chrome-devtools "npx -y chrome-devtools-mcp@latest"

Gemini CLIInstall the Chrome DevTools MCP server using the Gemini CLI.

Project wide:

gemini mcp add chrome-devtools npx chrome-devtools-mcp@latest

Globally:

gemini mcp add -s user chrome-devtools npx chrome-devtools-mcp@latest

Alternatively, follow the MCP guide and use the standard config from above.

Gemini Code Assist Follow the configure MCP guide using the standard config from above. JetBrains AI Assistant & Junie

Go to Settings | Tools | AI Assistant | Model Context Protocol (MCP) -> Add. Use the config provided above. The same way chrome-devtools-mcp can be configured for JetBrains Junie in Settings | Tools | Junie | MCP Settings -> Add. Use the config provided above.

Kiro

In Kiro Settings, go to Configure MCP > Open Workspace or User MCP Config > Use the configuration snippet provided above.

Or, from the IDE Activity Bar > Kiro > MCP Servers > Click Open MCP Config. Use the configuration snippet provided above.

Qoder

In Qoder Settings, go to MCP Server > + Add > Use the configuration snippet provided above.

Alternatively, follow the MCP guide and use the standard config from above.

Qoder CLI

Install the Chrome DevTools MCP server using the Qoder CLI (guide):

Project wide:

qodercli mcp add chrome-devtools -- npx chrome-devtools-mcp@latest

Globally:

qodercli mcp add -s user chrome-devtools -- npx chrome-devtools-mcp@latest

Visual Studio

Click the button to install:

Install in Visual Studio

Warp

Go to Settings | AI | Manage MCP Servers -> + Add to add an MCP Server. Use the config provided above.

Windsurf Follow the configure MCP guide using the standard config from above.

Your first prompt

Enter the following prompt in your MCP Client to check if everything is working:

Check the performance of https://developers.chrome.com

Your MCP client should open the browser and record a performance trace.

Note

The MCP server will start the browser automatically once the MCP client uses a tool that requires a running browser instance. Connecting to the Chrome DevTools MCP server on its own will not automatically start the browser.

Tools

If you run into any issues, checkout our troubleshooting guide.

Configuration

The Chrome DevTools MCP server supports the following configuration option:

Pass them via the args property in the JSON configuration. For example:

{ "mcpServers": { "chrome-devtools": { "command": "npx", "args": [ "chrome-devtools-mcp@latest", "--channel=canary", "--headless=true", "--isolated=true" ] } } }

Connecting via WebSocket with custom headers

You can connect directly to a Chrome WebSocket endpoint and include custom headers (e.g., for authentication):

{ "mcpServers": { "chrome-devtools": { "command": "npx", "args": [ "chrome-devtools-mcp@latest", "--wsEndpoint=ws://127.0.0.1:9222/devtools/browser/", "--wsHeaders={"Authorization":"Bearer YOUR_TOKEN"}" ] } } }

To get the WebSocket endpoint from a running Chrome instance, visit http://127.0.0.1:9222/json/version and look for the webSocketDebuggerUrl field.

You can also run npx chrome-devtools-mcp@latest --help to see all available configuration options.

Concepts

User data directory

chrome-devtools-mcp starts a Chrome's stable channel instance using the following user data directory:

The user data directory is not cleared between runs and shared across all instances of chrome-devtools-mcp. Set the isolated option to trueto use a temporary user data dir instead which will be cleared automatically after the browser is closed.

Connecting to a running Chrome instance

By default, the Chrome DevTools MCP server will start a new Chrome instance with a dedicated profile. This might not be ideal in all situations:

In these cases, start Chrome first and let the Chrome DevTools MCP server connect to it. There are two ways to do so:

Automatically connecting to a running Chrome instance

Step 1: Set up remote debugging in Chrome

In Chrome (>= M144), do the following to set up remote debugging:

  1. Navigate to chrome://inspect/#remote-debugging to enable remote debugging.
  2. Follow the dialog UI to allow or disallow incoming debugging connections.

Step 2: Configure Chrome DevTools MCP server to automatically connect to a running Chrome Instance

To connect the chrome-devtools-mcp server to the running Chrome instance, use--autoConnect command line argument for the MCP server.

The following code snippet is an example configuration for gemini-cli:

{ "mcpServers": { "chrome-devtools": { "command": "npx", "args": ["chrome-devtools-mcp@latest", "--autoConnect", "--channel=beta"] } } }

Note: you have to specify --channel=beta until Chrome M144 has reached the stable channel.

Step 3: Test your setup

Make sure your browser is running. Open gemini-cli and run the following prompt:

Check the performance of https://developers.chrome.com

Note: The autoConnect option requires the user to start Chrome.

The Chrome DevTools MCP server will try to connect to your running Chrome instance. It shows a dialog asking for user permission.

Clicking Allow results in the Chrome DevTools MCP server openingdevelopers.chrome.com and taking a performance trace.

Manual connection using port forwarding

You can connect to a running Chrome instance by using the --browser-url option. This is useful if you are running the MCP server in a sandboxed environment that does not allow starting a new Chrome instance.

Here is a step-by-step guide on how to connect to a running Chrome instance:

Step 1: Configure the MCP client

Add the --browser-url option to your MCP client configuration. The value of this option should be the URL of the running Chrome instance. http://127.0.0.1:9222 is a common default.

{ "mcpServers": { "chrome-devtools": { "command": "npx", "args": [ "chrome-devtools-mcp@latest", "--browser-url=http://127.0.0.1:9222" ] } } }

Step 2: Start the Chrome browser

Warning

Enabling the remote debugging port opens up a debugging port on the running browser instance. Any application on your machine can connect to this port and control the browser. Make sure that you are not browsing any sensitive websites while the debugging port is open.

Start the Chrome browser with the remote debugging port enabled. Make sure to close any running Chrome instances before starting a new one with the debugging port enabled. The port number you choose must be the same as the one you specified in the --browser-url option in your MCP client configuration.

For security reasons, Chrome requires you to use a non-default user data directory when enabling the remote debugging port. You can specify a custom directory using the --user-data-dir flag. This ensures that your regular browsing profile and data are not exposed to the debugging session.

macOS

/Applications/Google\ Chrome.app/Contents/MacOS/Google\ Chrome --remote-debugging-port=9222 --user-data-dir=/tmp/chrome-profile-stable

Linux

/usr/bin/google-chrome --remote-debugging-port=9222 --user-data-dir=/tmp/chrome-profile-stable

Windows

"C:\Program Files\Google\Chrome\Application\chrome.exe" --remote-debugging-port=9222 --user-data-dir="%TEMP%\chrome-profile-stable"

Step 3: Test your setup

After configuring the MCP client and starting the Chrome browser, you can test your setup by running a simple prompt in your MCP client:

Check the performance of https://developers.chrome.com

Your MCP client should connect to the running Chrome instance and receive a performance report.

If you hit VM-to-host port forwarding issues, see the “Remote debugging between virtual machine (VM) and host fails” section in docs/troubleshooting.md.

For more details on remote debugging, see the Chrome DevTools documentation.

Known limitations

Operating system sandboxes

Some MCP clients allow sandboxing the MCP server using macOS Seatbelt or Linux containers. If sandboxes are enabled, chrome-devtools-mcp is not able to start Chrome that requires permissions to create its own sandboxes. As a workaround, either disable sandboxing for chrome-devtools-mcp in your MCP client or use--browser-url to connect to a Chrome instance that you start manually outside of the MCP client sandbox.