Enables AI assistants to interact with Anki to manage flashcards, review and rate due cards, create and search for notes and decks, and manage media files through the AnkiConnect plugin.
Click on "Install Server".
Wait a few minutes for the server to deploy. Once ready, it will show a "Started" state.
In the chat, type
@followed by the MCP server name and your instructions, e.g., "@Anki MCP ServerAdd a flashcard to my Spanish deck for the word 'perro' meaning 'dog'."
That's it! The server will respond to your query, and you can continue using it as needed.
Here is a step-by-step guide with screenshots.
Anki MCP Server
⚠️ IMPORTANT: Project Renamed (v0.8.2+)
This project has been renamed and moved:
Package:
anki-mcp-http→@ankimcp/anki-mcp-serverCommands:
anki-mcp-http→ankimcporanki-mcp-serverRepository:
anki-mcp/anki-mcp-desktop→ankimcp/anki-mcp-serverThe old
anki-mcp-httppackage continues to be published for backward compatibility but is deprecated. Please migrate to the new package.
Beta - This project is in active development. APIs and features may change.
A Model Context Protocol (MCP) server that enables AI assistants to interact with Anki, the spaced repetition flashcard application.
Transform your Anki experience with natural language interaction - like having a private tutor. The AI assistant doesn't just present questions and answers; it can explain concepts, make the learning process more engaging and human-like, provide context, and adapt to your learning style. It can create and edit notes on the fly, turning your study sessions into dynamic conversations. More features coming soon!
Examples and Tutorials
For comprehensive guides, real-world examples, and step-by-step tutorials on using this MCP server with Claude Desktop, visit:
ankimcp.ai - Complete documentation with practical examples and use cases
Available Tools
Review & Study
sync- Sync with AnkiWebget_due_cards- Get cards for reviewpresent_card- Show card for reviewrate_card- Rate card performance
Deck Management
list_decks- Show available deckscreateDeck- Create new decks
Note Management
addNote- Create new notesfindNotes- Search for notes using Anki query syntaxnotesInfo- Get detailed information about notes (fields, tags, CSS)updateNoteFields- Update existing note fields (CSS-aware, supports HTML)deleteNotes- Delete notes and their cards
Media Management
mediaActions- Manage media files (audio/images)storeMediaFile- Upload media from base64 data, file paths, or URLsretrieveMediaFile- Download media as base64getMediaFilesNames- List media files with optional pattern filteringdeleteMediaFile- Remove media files
💡 Best Practice for Images:
✅ Use file paths (e.g.,
/Users/you/image.png) - Fast and efficient✅ Use URLs (e.g.,
https://example.com/image.jpg) - Direct download❌ Avoid base64 - Extremely slow and token-inefficient
Just tell Claude where the image is, and it will handle the upload automatically using the most efficient method.
Model/Template Management
modelNames- List note typesmodelFieldNames- Get fields for a note typemodelStyling- Get CSS styling for a note type
Prerequisites
Anki with AnkiConnect plugin installed
Node.js 20+
Installation
This server works in two modes:
Local mode (STDIO) - For Claude Desktop on your computer (recommended for most users)
Remote mode (HTTP) - For web-based AI assistants like ChatGPT or Claude.ai
Option 1: MCPB Bundle (Recommended - Local Mode)
The easiest way to install this MCP server for Claude Desktop:
Download the latest
.mcpbbundle from the Releases pageIn Claude Desktop, install the extension:
Method 1: Go to Settings → Extensions, then drag and drop the
.mcpbfileMethod 2: Go to Settings → Developer → Extensions → Install Extension, then select the
.mcpbfile
Configure AnkiConnect URL if needed (defaults to
http://localhost:8765)Restart Claude Desktop
That's it! The bundle includes everything needed to run the server locally.
Option 2: NPM Package with STDIO (For Other MCP Clients)
Want to use Anki with MCP clients like Cursor IDE, Cline, or Zed Editor? Use the npm package with the --stdio flag:
Supported Clients:
Cursor IDE - AI-powered code editor
Cline - VS Code extension for AI assistance
Zed Editor - Fast, modern code editor
Other MCP clients that support STDIO transport
Configuration - Choose one method:
Method 1: Using npx (recommended - no installation needed)
Method 2: Using global installation
First, install globally:
Then configure:
Configuration file locations:
Cursor IDE:
~/.cursor/mcp.json(macOS/Linux) or%USERPROFILE%\.cursor\mcp.json(Windows)Cline: Accessible via settings UI in VS Code
Zed Editor: Install as MCP extension through extension marketplace
For client-specific features and troubleshooting, consult your MCP client's documentation.
Option 3: HTTP Mode (For Remote AI Assistants)
Want to use Anki with ChatGPT or Claude.ai in your browser? This mode lets you connect web-based AI tools to your local Anki.
How it works (simple explanation):
You run a small server on your computer (where Anki is installed)
Use the built-in
--ngrokflag to automatically create a public tunnel URLShare that URL with ChatGPT or Claude.ai
Now the AI can talk to your Anki through the internet!
New in v0.8.0: Integrated ngrok support with the --ngrok flag - no need to run ngrok separately!
Setup - Choose one method:
Method 1: Using npx (recommended - no installation needed)
Method 2: Using global installation
Method 3: Install from source (for development)
CLI Options:
Using with ngrok:
Method 1: Integrated (Recommended - One Command)
Method 2: Manual (Two Terminals)
Benefits of
✅ One command instead of two terminals
✅ Automatic cleanup when you press Ctrl+C
✅ URL displayed directly in the startup banner
✅ Works with custom ports:
ankimcp --port 8080 --ngrok
Security note: Anyone with your ngrok URL can access your Anki, so keep that URL private!
Option 4: Manual Installation from Source (Local Mode)
For development or advanced usage:
Connect to Claude Desktop (Local Mode)
You can configure the server in Claude Desktop by either:
Going to: Settings → Developer → Edit Config
Or manually editing the config file
Configuration
Add the following to your Claude Desktop config:
Replace /path/to/anki-mcp-server with your actual project path.
Config File Locations
macOS:
~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.jsonWindows:
%APPDATA%\Claude\claude_desktop_config.jsonLinux:
~/.config/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
For more details, see the official MCP documentation.
Environment Variables (Optional)
Variable | Description | Default |
| AnkiConnect URL |
|
| API version |
|
| API key if configured in AnkiConnect | - |
| Request timeout in ms |
|
Usage Examples
Searching and Updating Notes
Anki Query Syntax Examples
The findNotes tool supports Anki's powerful query syntax:
"deck:DeckName"- All notes in a specific deck"tag:important"- Notes with the "important" tag"is:due"- Cards that are due for review"is:new"- New cards that haven't been studied"added:7"- Notes added in the last 7 days"front:hello"- Notes with "hello" in the front field"flag:1"- Notes with red flag"prop:due<=2"- Cards due within 2 days"deck:Spanish tag:verb"- Spanish deck notes with verb tag (AND)"deck:Spanish OR deck:French"- Notes from either deck
Important Notes
CSS and HTML Handling
The
notesInfotool returns CSS styling information for proper rendering awarenessThe
updateNoteFieldstool supports HTML content in fields and preserves CSS stylingEach note model has its own CSS styling - use
modelStylingto get model-specific CSS
Update Warning
⚠️ IMPORTANT: When using updateNoteFields, do NOT view the note in Anki's browser while updating, or the fields will not update properly. Close the browser or switch to a different note before updating. See Known Issues for more details.
Deletion Safety
The deleteNotes tool requires explicit confirmation (confirmDeletion: true) to prevent accidental deletions. Deleting a note removes ALL associated cards permanently.
Known Issues
For a comprehensive list of known issues and limitations, please visit our documentation:
Critical Limitations
Note Updates Fail When Viewed in Browser
⚠️ IMPORTANT: When updating notes using updateNoteFields, the update will silently fail if the note is currently being viewed in Anki's browser window. This is an upstream AnkiConnect limitation.
Workaround: Always close the browser or navigate to a different note before updating.
For more details and other known issues, see the full documentation.
Development
Transport Modes
This server supports two MCP transport modes via separate entry points:
STDIO Mode (Default)
For local MCP clients like Claude Desktop
Uses standard input/output for communication
Entry point:
dist/main-stdio.jsRun:
npm run start:prod:stdioornode dist/main-stdio.jsMCPB bundle: Uses STDIO mode
HTTP Mode (Streamable HTTP)
For remote MCP clients and web-based integrations
Uses MCP Streamable HTTP protocol
Entry point:
dist/main-http.jsRun:
npm run start:prod:httpornode dist/main-http.jsDefault port: 3000 (configurable via
PORTenv var)Default host:
127.0.0.1(configurable viaHOSTenv var)MCP endpoint:
http://127.0.0.1:3000/(root path)
Building
Both main-stdio.js and main-http.js are in the same dist/ directory. Choose which to run based on your needs.
HTTP Mode Configuration
Environment Variables:
PORT- HTTP server port (default: 3000)HOST- Bind address (default: 127.0.0.1 for localhost-only)ALLOWED_ORIGINS- Comma-separated list of allowed origins for CORS (default: localhost)LOG_LEVEL- Logging level (default: info)
Security:
Origin header validation (prevents DNS rebinding attacks)
Binds to localhost (127.0.0.1) by default
No authentication in current version (OAuth support planned)
Example: Running Modes
Building an MCPB Bundle
To create a distributable MCPB bundle:
This command will:
Sync version from
package.jsontomanifest.jsonRemove old
.mcpbfilesBuild the TypeScript project
Package
dist/andnode_modules/into an.mcpbfileRun
mcpb cleanto remove devDependencies (optimizes bundle from ~47MB to ~10MB)
The output file will be named anki-mcp-server-X.X.X.mcpb and can be distributed for one-click installation.
What Gets Bundled
The MCPB package includes:
Compiled JavaScript (
dist/directory - includes both entry points)Production dependencies only (
node_modules/- devDependencies removed bymcpb clean)Package metadata (
package.json)Manifest configuration (
manifest.json- configured to usemain-stdio.js)Icon (
icon.png)
Source files, tests, and development configs are automatically excluded via .mcpbignore.
Logging in Claude Desktop
When running as an MCPB extension in Claude Desktop, logs are written to:
Log Location: ~/Library/Logs/Claude/ (macOS)
The logs are split across multiple files:
main.log - General Claude Desktop application logs
mcp-server-Anki MCP Server.log - MCP protocol messages for this extension
mcp.log - Combined MCP logs from all servers
Note: The pino logger output (INFO, ERROR, WARN messages from the server code) goes to stderr and appears in the MCP-specific log files. Claude Desktop determines which log file receives which messages, but generally:
Application startup and MCP protocol communication → MCP-specific log
Server internal logging (pino) → Both MCP-specific log and sometimes main.log
To view logs in real-time:
Debugging the MCP Server
You can debug the MCP server using the MCP Inspector and attaching a debugger from your IDE (WebStorm, VS Code, etc.).
Note for HTTP Mode: When testing HTTP mode (Streamable HTTP) with MCP Inspector, use "Connection Type: Via Proxy" to avoid CORS errors.
Step 1: Configure Debug Server in MCP Inspector
The mcp-inspector-config.json already includes a debug server configuration:
Step 2: Start the Debug Server
Run the MCP Inspector with the debug server:
This will start the server with Node.js debugging enabled on port 9229 and pause execution at the first line.
Step 3: Attach Debugger from Your IDE
WebStorm
Go to Run → Edit Configurations
Add a new Attach to Node.js/Chrome configuration
Set the port to
9229Click Debug to attach
VS Code
Open the Debug panel (Ctrl+Shift+D / Cmd+Shift+D)
Select Debug MCP Server (Attach) configuration
Press F5 to attach
Step 4: Set Breakpoints and Debug
Once attached, you can:
Set breakpoints in your TypeScript source files
Step through code execution
Inspect variables and call stack
Use the debug console for evaluating expressions
The debugger will work with source maps, allowing you to debug the original TypeScript code rather than the compiled JavaScript.
Debugging with Claude Desktop
You can also debug the MCP server while it runs inside Claude Desktop by enabling the Node.js debugger and attaching your IDE.
Step 1: Configure Claude Desktop for Debugging
Update your Claude Desktop config to enable debugging:
macOS: ~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
Windows: %APPDATA%\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json
Linux: ~/.config/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
Key change: Add --inspect=9229 before the path to dist/main-stdio.js
Debug options:
--inspect=9229- Start debugger immediately, doesn't block (recommended)--inspect-brk=9229- Pause execution until debugger attaches (for debugging startup issues)
Step 2: Restart Claude Desktop
After saving the config, restart Claude Desktop. The MCP server will now run with debugging enabled on port 9229.
Step 3: Attach Debugger from Your IDE
WebStorm
Go to Run → Edit Configurations
Click the + button and select Attach to Node.js/Chrome
Configure:
Name:
Attach to Anki MCP (Claude Desktop)Host:
localhostPort:
9229Attach to:
Node.js < 8orChrome or Node.js > 6.3(depending on WebStorm version)
Click OK
Click Debug (Shift+F9) to attach
VS Code
Add to
.vscode/launch.json:
Open the Debug panel (Ctrl+Shift+D / Cmd+Shift+D)
Select Attach to Anki MCP (Claude Desktop)
Press F5 to attach
Step 4: Debug in Real-Time
Once attached, you can:
Set breakpoints in your TypeScript source files (e.g.,
src/mcp/primitives/essential/tools/create-model.tool.ts)Use Claude Desktop normally - breakpoints will hit when tools are invoked
Step through code execution
Inspect variables and call stack
Use the debug console
Example: Set a breakpoint in create-model.tool.ts at line 119, then ask Claude to create a new model. The debugger will pause at your breakpoint!
Note: The debugger stays attached as long as Claude Desktop is running. You can detach/reattach anytime without restarting Claude Desktop.
Build Commands
NPM Package Testing (Local)
Test the npm package locally before publishing:
How it works:
npm packcreates a.tgzfile identical to what npm publish would createInstalling from
.tgzsimulates what users get fromnpm install -g ankimcpThis lets you test the full user experience before publishing to npm
Testing Commands
Test Coverage
The project maintains 70% minimum coverage thresholds for:
Branches
Functions
Lines
Statements
Coverage reports are generated in the coverage/ directory.
Versioning
This project follows Semantic Versioning with a pre-1.0 development approach:
0.x.x - Beta/Development versions (current phase)
0.1.x - Bug fixes and patches
0.2.0+ - New features or minor improvements
Breaking changes are acceptable in 0.x versions
1.0.0 - First stable release
Will be released when the API is stable and tested
Breaking changes will require major version bumps (2.0.0, etc.)
Current Status: 0.8.0 - Active beta development. New features include integrated ngrok tunneling (--ngrok flag), the twenty_rules prompt for evidence-based flashcard creation, media file management, and improved prompt system. APIs may change based on feedback and testing.
Similar Projects
If you're exploring Anki MCP integrations, here are other projects in this space:
scorzeth/anki-mcp-server
Status: Appears to be abandoned (no recent updates)
Early implementation of Anki MCP integration
nailuoGG/anki-mcp-server
Approach: Lightweight, single-file implementation
Architecture: Procedural code structure with all tools in one file
Good for: Simple use cases, minimal dependencies
Why this project differs:
Enterprise-grade architecture: Built on NestJS with dependency injection
Modular design: Each tool is a separate class with clear separation of concerns
Maintainability: Easy to extend with new features without touching existing code
Testing: Comprehensive test suite with 70% coverage requirement
Type safety: Strict TypeScript with Zod validation
Error handling: Robust error handling with helpful user feedback
Production-ready: Proper logging, progress reporting, and MCPB bundle support
Scalability: Can easily grow from basic tools to complex workflows
Use case: If you need a solid foundation for building advanced Anki integrations or plan to extend functionality significantly, this project's architectural approach makes it easier to maintain and scale over time.
Useful Links
License & Attribution
This project is licensed under the GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 or later (AGPL-3.0-or-later).
Why AGPL-3.0?
This license was chosen to maintain compatibility with Anki's AGPL-3.0 license for potential future integration scenarios.
What this means:
Personal use: Use the software freely
Running as a service for others: You must provide source code access (AGPL Section 13)
Modifying and distributing: Share your improvements under AGPL-3.0-or-later
For complete license terms, see the LICENSE file.
Third-Party Attributions
Anki® is a registered trademark of Ankitects Pty Ltd. This project is an unofficial third-party tool and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by Ankitects Pty Ltd. The Anki logo is used under the alternative license for referencing Anki with a link to https://apps.ankiweb.net. For the official Anki application, visit https://apps.ankiweb.net.
Model Context Protocol (MCP) is an open standard by Anthropic. The MCP logo is from the official MCP documentation repository and is used under the MIT License. For more information about MCP, visit https://modelcontextprotocol.io.
This is an independent project that bridges Anki and MCP technologies. All trademarks, service marks, trade names, product names, and logos are the property of their respective owners.