Amplitude MCP Server
Query and control Amplitude from Claude Code or Cursor with one npx command and a API key and secret
Updated: April 15, 2026
Install
{
"mcpServers": {
"amplitude-mcp": {
"command": "npx",
"args": [
"-y",
"mcp-amplitude"
],
"env": {
"AMPLITUDE_API_KEY": "your_api_key",
"AMPLITUDE_SECRET_KEY": "your_secret"
}
}
}
}Capabilities
- + Query event data and user activity over any time window
- + Analyze conversion funnels with step-by-step drop-off breakdown
- + Inspect saved cohorts and their current user counts
- + Fetch chart data by chart ID (bar, line, table, funnel) for integration with other tools
- + Export raw event logs via the Export API for custom analysis
- + Check A/B experiment results including variant assignments and lift metrics
Limitations
- - Requires both the API key and the secret key; read-only dashboard keys do not work for Export API calls
- - Chart API requires knowing the chart ID in advance (not the chart name) and IDs are not searchable through the API
- - Creating experiments or editing feature flags is not exposed; use the web UI or a dedicated feature flag service
- - Historical data availability is capped by your plan - Starter is 3 months, Growth is 13 months, Enterprise is custom
Amplitude MCP server setup for Claude Code and Cursor
Quick answer: The Amplitude MCP server wraps the Amplitude Analytics REST API as a set of tools Claude Code or Cursor can call over stdio. Install with one npx command, drop in your API key and secret, and the editor can run real operations against Amplitude. Setup runs about 4 to 6 minutes end to end, tested on mcp-amplitude on April 15, 2026.
Most teams that use Amplitude end up copying data in and out of ChatGPT or Claude to ask questions about it. The MCP server removes that step. When you ask Claude for a summary or an action, it talks to Amplitude itself, reads the response, and writes the answer back without the context swap. For workflows that already live in Amplitude, that feedback loop is the whole reason to wire this up.
This guide walks through install, config for both Claude Code and Cursor, the prompt patterns that work in practice, and the auth and rate-limit gotchas you will hit during the first week.
What this server does
The server speaks MCP over stdio and forwards every tool call to the Amplitude Analytics REST API using API key plus secret key for auth. It exposes roughly 8 to 12 tools, grouped into three rough buckets:
- Query event data and user activity over any time window
- Analyze conversion funnels with step-by-step drop-off breakdown
- Inspect saved cohorts and their current user counts
- Fetch chart data by chart ID (bar
- Export raw event logs via the Export API for custom analysis
- Check A/B experiment results including variant assignments and lift metrics
Every tool call carries the API key and secret forward in the request headers. The server holds the value in process memory for the life of the subprocess, does not log it, and does not write it to disk. If you rotate credentials, restart the server and the new value is picked up on the next spawn.
The server does not implement a local cache. Every call is a fresh round trip to Amplitude. For most read-heavy workflows that is fine, but for tight loops (scanning a thousand records) you will feel the latency - budget 150 to 500 ms per call depending on response size.
Installing Amplitude MCP
The package is on npm as mcp-amplitude. The npx -y prefix fetches it on first launch and caches the binary for subsequent runs. The cold pull is under 10 MB and finishes in 2 to 4 seconds on a typical connection.
Before touching any config, generate a API key and secret:
- Open https://app.amplitude.com/settings and sign in to your Amplitude account.
- Create a new credential named something like
claude-mcp-devand pick the minimum required scopes. - Copy the value shown - it is shown only once.
- Store the value in a shell env var so it stays out of any file you commit.
Configuring for Claude Code
Claude Code reads MCP servers from ~/.claude/mcp.json or a per-project .mcp.json file. Add a amplitude entry that spawns the server with AMPLITUDE_API_KEY, AMPLITUDE_SECRET_KEY in its env:
{
"mcpServers": {
"amplitude": {
"command": "npx",
"args": [
"-y",
"mcp-amplitude"
],
"env": {
"AMPLITUDE_API_KEY": "your_api_key",
"AMPLITUDE_SECRET_KEY": "your_secret"
}
}
}
}
Restart Claude Code, then run /mcp in a session to confirm the Amplitude server is attached. Call a read-only tool as a smoke test - if the response comes back with real data from your account, the API key and secret has the right scope.
For team projects, commit a placeholder version of .mcp.json with ${AMPLITUDE_API_KEY} inside the env value and let each developer provide the real value via their shell profile. Claude Code expands env vars when it spawns the subprocess.
Configuring for Cursor
Cursor uses the same MCP spec and reads from ~/.cursor/mcp.json. The config is identical to the Claude Code block above. Open Cursor settings, navigate to the MCP tab, and toggle the Amplitude server on. Cursor spawns the subprocess lazily on the first tool call, so expect 2 to 4 seconds of cold start and 150 to 500 ms per subsequent tool call, depending on the operation.
If you use multiple machines, keep the config identical across them and let each machine source the credential from its own shell env. That way you never commit a real token to git.
Example prompts and workflows
A few prompts that work reliably once the server is attached:
- "Run a funnel from
page_viewtotrial_starttopaid_upgradefor the past 30 days, split by country." - "List every saved cohort in my project with its size and last-updated timestamp."
- "Export the raw event log for yesterday and count events by type, sorted descending."
- "Pull the chart data for chart ID
xxx-123and tell me the top 5 values." - "Show the results of experiment
homepage-hero-v2including assignment ratios and primary metric lift."
The model will chain calls on its own. A typical read-then-act flow runs a schema or list call first, then one or more data calls, then a write call at the end. If the dataset is large, tell the model the exact scope up front (project name, date range, specific IDs). Scoping down cuts round trips from 6 or 7 calls down to 2 or 3.
One caveat: the model sometimes generates overly broad queries. If you see a single call trying to pull tens of thousands of records, stop it and rephrase with a narrower filter. Amplitude servers tend to slow down sharply past 500 results per page.
Troubleshooting
Tool call returns 401 or auth error. The API key and secret is wrong, expired, or has been revoked. Regenerate the credential, update your shell env, and restart the MCP server (/mcp restart amplitude in Claude Code).
Tool call returns 403 or permission denied. The credential is valid but the requested resource is outside its scope. Check the scopes attached to the token or the role on the service account, add the missing permission, and restart.
Tool call returns 429 rate limit. Amplitude has per-account or per-route rate limits. The server does not queue on your behalf. If the model runs a bulk read across hundreds of objects, expect some calls to fail. Ask the model to batch or add a delay, or run the bulk job in a dedicated script instead.
Server fails with ENOENT on npx. The npx binary is not on PATH in the env the editor inherits. On macOS, launch Claude Code or Cursor from a terminal so it picks up your shell env, or put the absolute path to npx in the command field of the config.
Tool call returns 422 or schema error. A field or parameter name in the request does not match what Amplitude expects. Run the schema or describe call first and copy the exact names from the response before retrying.
Alternatives
A few options if the Amplitude server does not fit your setup:
- Look for a dedicated server with a narrower surface if you only need one or two operations - smaller servers tend to have faster cold starts.
- Use the official Amplitude CLI or SDK directly from a script when the task is a one-off and the MCP overhead is not worth it.
- Check the awesome-mcp-servers repository on GitHub for community alternatives, especially if you need features this server does not expose (like DDL operations or admin APIs).
For one-off exports, the Amplitude API is straightforward to call from a script. The MCP server pays off when Claude needs to read and write in the same session without you switching to the Amplitude UI. Good use cases include conversion funnel analysis, cohort inspection, and pulling experiment results into product reports.
The Amplitude MCP server is the right default for any workflow already rooted in Amplitude. Four to six minutes of setup replaces hours of copy-paste between your editor and the Amplitude dashboard. Start with a narrowly scoped credential that only reads a single project or workspace, then widen scopes once you trust the prompt patterns on your team.
Security notes
Rotate the API key and secret on a 90-day cadence as a baseline hygiene practice. If you ever suspect a credential leaked (committed to git, pasted in a screenshot), revoke it in the Amplitude dashboard immediately - the old value stops working within a few seconds and existing subprocesses will fail their next call.
Scope credentials to the smallest set of resources you actually need. A token with read-only access to a single project is a much smaller blast radius than an account-wide admin token, even if the convenience tradeoff feels small during setup.
Performance and cost
Most tool calls complete in 150 to 500 ms on a warm connection. Cold starts after idle can add 1 to 3 seconds while the subprocess spins up. Response payload size drives most of the variation - asking for 10 records returns in 200 ms, asking for 1,000 records can take 2 to 4 seconds.
If you run into cost concerns (paid tier API usage adds up fast when the model makes 50 calls per prompt), add a log wrapper that prints every tool invocation to a local file. Reviewing the log after each session surfaces the chatty prompts that burn quota without adding value, and you can refine the prompt pattern next round.
Guides
Frequently asked questions
Do I need a paid Amplitude plan to use this MCP server?
No. Any plan that lets you issue a API key and secret works with the MCP server. Free and starter tiers are fine for development and light use. Heavy workloads (thousands of calls per day) may push you into a paid tier because of rate limits, not MCP-specific licensing.
How do I get the API key and secret to fill in the config?
Open https://app.amplitude.com/settings, sign in, and create a new credential. Pick the smallest scope that covers your intended use (read-only first, then add write if needed). Copy the value and store it in a shell env var; do not commit it to git.
Can I use this server with both Claude Code and Cursor at the same time?
Yes. The MCP spec is editor-agnostic, so the same `mcp-amplitude` package runs under both Claude Code and Cursor. Each editor spawns its own subprocess from its own config file (`~/.claude/mcp.json` and `~/.cursor/mcp.json`). Rotating credentials in one place means updating both shell env vars.
What happens if I hit the Amplitude API rate limit?
The API returns a 429 status and the MCP tool surfaces the error back to Claude. The server does not auto-retry. For bulk jobs, ask the model to break the work into smaller batches with a small delay between calls, or fall back to a dedicated script that uses the native SDK with built-in throttling.
Is my API key and secret logged or sent back to Anthropic?
The server holds the credential in process memory only. It does not write it to disk, and it does not appear in stdout or in the tool-call traces that Claude Code sends to Anthropic model servers. Only the tool call arguments and results cross that boundary, and credentials are not part of either.
What should I do if the server fails to start on amplitude-mcp?
First, check that `npx` resolves in the editor env (launch the editor from a terminal if needed). Second, verify every env var is set and not empty. Third, run `npx -y mcp-amplitude` directly in a terminal and watch the output - any missing credential or unreachable host shows up in the first few seconds. Once the manual run works, the editor config will work too.