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.
- Get performance insights: Uses Chrome DevTools to record traces and extract actionable performance insights.
- Advanced browser debugging: Analyze network requests, take screenshots and check the browser console.
- Reliable automation. Uses puppeteer to automate actions in Chrome and automatically wait for action results.
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.
- Node.js 22.12.0 or newer.
- Chrome current stable version or newer.
- npm.
Add the following config to your MCP client:
{
"mcpServers": {
"chrome-devtools": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["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.
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
Copilot / VS Code
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":"chrome-devtools","command":"npx","args":["chrome-devtools-mcp@latest"]}'
Cursor
Click the button to install:
Or install manually:
Go to Cursor Settings
-> MCP
-> New MCP Server
. Use the config provided above.
Gemini CLI
Install 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.
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.
- Input automation (7 tools)
- Navigation automation (7 tools)
- Emulation (3 tools)
- Performance (3 tools)
- Network (2 tools)
- Debugging (4 tools)
The Chrome DevTools MCP server supports the following configuration option:
-
--browserUrl
,-u
Connect to a running Chrome instance using port forwarding. For more details see: https://developer.chrome.com/docs/devtools/remote-debugging/local-server.- Type: string
-
--headless
Whether to run in headless (no UI) mode.- Type: boolean
- Default:
false
-
--executablePath
,-e
Path to custom Chrome executable.- Type: string
-
--isolated
If specified, creates a temporary user-data-dir that is automatically cleaned up after the browser is closed.- Type: boolean
- Default:
false
-
--channel
Specify a different Chrome channel that should be used. The default is the stable channel version.- Type: string
- Choices:
stable
,canary
,beta
,dev
-
--logFile
Path to a file to write debug logs to. Set the env variableDEBUG
to*
to enable verbose logs. Useful for submitting bug reports.- Type: string
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"
]
}
}
}
You can also run npx chrome-devtools-mcp@latest --help
to see all available configuration options.
chrome-devtools-mcp
starts a Chrome's stable channel instance using the following user
data directory:
- Linux / MacOS:
$HOME/.cache/chrome-devtools-mcp/chrome-profile-$CHANNEL
- Window:
%HOMEPATH%/.cache/chrome-devtools-mcp/chrome-profile-$CHANNEL
The user data directory is not cleared between runs and shared across
all instances of chrome-devtools-mcp
. Set the isolated
option to true
to use a temporary user data dir instead which will be cleared automatically after
the browser is closed.
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
--connect-url
to connect to a Chrome instance that you start manually outside
of the MCP client sandbox.