Apple Calendar MCP Server
Provides tools for interacting with Apple Reminders and Calendar on macOS, enabling CRUD operations for reminders, subtasks, lists, calendar events, and calendars via the EventKit framework.
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., "@Apple Calendar MCP ServerWhat events do I have tomorrow?"
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.
Apple Events MCP Server

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A Model Context Protocol (MCP) server providing native integration with Apple Reminders and Calendar on macOS via the EventKit framework. Exposes reminders, lists, subtasks, and calendar events through a standardized interface with full CRUD operations.
Calendar-only fork. This fork intentionally exposes only the calendar tools (
calendar_events,calendar_calendars) so it can run alongside a separate, dedicated Apple Reminders MCP without overlapping. The reminder tools from upstream are not registered — the reminder code paths remain in the tree but are dormant and never surface as MCP tools. Reminder-focused features described below (reminders, lists, subtasks, and the reminder prompt library) refer to upstream and are not exposed here. SeeFORK-NOTES.md.
The EventKit backend is the standalone event Swift CLI, vendored as a git submodule and built into bin/event during pnpm install — no separate brew install required. See docs/migration-to-event-cli.md for the v1.5.0 backend swap and the list of write fields not yet exposed by event.
Table of Contents
Related MCP server: che-ical-mcp
Features
Full CRUD for reminders, subtasks, reminder lists, and calendar events
Priority (high/medium/low/none), tags, and checklist subtasks with progress tracking
Multi-criteria filtering: completion, due-date range, priority, tags, full-text search, recurring, location-based
Flexible date formats (
YYYY-MM-DD,YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss, ISO 8601) with timezone awarenessNative macOS integration via EventKit — values configured in Reminders.app / Calendar.app round-trip through read responses
Automatic macOS permission discovery and prompting
Full Unicode support with comprehensive input validation
Prerequisites
Node.js 20 or later
macOS (required for EventKit)
Xcode Command Line Tools (only when building from source)
pnpm (recommended)
The published npm package ships a pre-built, universal, code-signed bin/event binary, so npx users need neither Xcode nor a Swift toolchain. Building from a git clone requires the items above.
Quick Start
npx mcp-server-apple-eventsConfiguration
Add the server to your MCP client. The npx form works for every client below; for a local build, replace command/args with node pointing at dist/index.js.
Cursor
Settings → MCP → Add new global MCP server:
{
"mcpServers": {
"apple-reminders": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "mcp-server-apple-events"]
}
}
}ChatWise
Settings → Tools → "+", then:
Type:
stdioID:
apple-remindersCommand:
mcp-server-apple-eventsArgs: (empty)
Claude Desktop
Edit claude_desktop_config.json (open it via Settings → Developer Option → Edit Config, or directly at ~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json on macOS / %APPDATA%\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json on Windows):
{
"mcpServers": {
"apple-reminders": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "mcp-server-apple-events"]
}
}
}For a local build of this calendar-only fork, use a distinct server name
(apple-calendar) so it is unambiguous alongside a separate Apple Reminders
MCP:
{
"mcpServers": {
"apple-calendar": {
"command": "node",
"args": ["/absolute/path/to/apple-calendar-mcp/dist/index.js"]
}
}
}See the official MCP docs for connecting local servers. Restart Claude Desktop completely (quit, not just close) for changes to take effect.
macOS Permissions
The vendored event CLI embeds its own Info.plist (bundle id me.frad.event) declaring all Reminders and Calendar privacy strings, and is spawned through the bundled bin/event-disclaim shim, which disclaims TCC responsibility at spawn time. macOS therefore attributes the permission request to event itself, not the app that launched the MCP server — so the first EventKit call prompts for "event", the grant appears under System Settings > Privacy & Security > Reminders / Calendars as event, and one grant covers every MCP client on the machine (Claude Desktop, Codex Desktop, Cursor, terminal clients, …). See issue #93 for background.
When event detects a notDetermined status it calls requestFullAccessToReminders / requestFullAccessToEvents, which surfaces the system prompt. If the OS ever loses track of permissions, rerun ./check-permissions.sh to re-open the dialogs.
Calendar read errors
If you see Failed to read calendar events, set Calendar to Full Calendar Access under System Settings > Privacy & Security > Calendars, or rerun ./check-permissions.sh (it checks both Reminders and Calendars).
Recovering a stuck TCC state (no prompt ever appears)
If the permission dialog never appears and event is missing from System Settings → Privacy & Security → Reminders / Calendars, your machine is in a stale/misattributed TCC state. The server-side disclaim fix prevents this on a clean machine but cannot clear already-corrupted entries. Recovery:
Reset Calendar and Reminders TCC entries globally (per-app reset frequently does not work — the bare form clears all entries, which is what clears the bad state):
tccutil reset Calendar tccutil reset RemindersThis clears Calendar/Reminders access for every app; other apps re-prompt next time.
Re-trigger the permission from inside a Claude conversation (Claude Desktop or Claude Code) by asking, e.g., "Use AppleScript to check my Calendar and Reminders." Grant access and the server should work normally. See issue #83.
macOS 26 (Tahoe) could not build module 'Foundation'
If pnpm build fails with could not build module 'Foundation' (or SDK is not supported by the compiler), your Swift toolchain is older than the macOS 26 SDK requires — it needs Swift 6.3 or newer, but the Command Line Tools shipped with early macOS 26 point releases include Swift 6.2.x. pnpm build:event detects this and prints the same remediation; see issue #85. Fix by installing Xcode 26.x from the App Store, or updating Command Line Tools to a Swift 6.3+ version:
softwareupdate --list
sudo softwareupdate -i "Command Line Tools for Xcode-<latest>"
sudo xcode-select --switch /Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer # if full Xcode is installed
xcrun swiftc --version # should report Apple Swift version 6.3 or newerUsage Examples
Once configured, ask Claude to interact with your Apple Reminders and Calendar. Example prompts:
Create a reminder to "Buy groceries" for tomorrow at 5 PM with tags shopping and errands.
Add a high-priority reminder to "Finish quarterly report" due Friday in my "Work" list.
Create "Grocery shopping" with subtasks: milk, eggs, bread, butter.
Show me all high-priority reminders due today tagged "urgent".
Show subtasks for my "Grocery shopping" reminder and mark "milk" as complete.
Update "Buy groceries" — change the title to "Buy organic groceries" and set priority to high.
Show reminders from my "Work" list, and list all my reminder lists.
Create a calendar event "Team standup" tomorrow from 9:00 to 9:30 in "Work".
Show my calendar events for the next week.The server processes natural-language requests, interacts with Apple's native Reminders and Calendar apps, and returns formatted results.
Alarms, recurrence rules, and location triggers are read-only via this server — configure them in Reminders.app / Calendar.app. They still appear in read results with visual indicators.
Available MCP Tools
Service-scoped tools mirror Apple Reminders and Calendar domains. All take an action field plus action-specific parameters (the MCP client introspects the full Zod schema; only actions are listed here). Date fields accept YYYY-MM-DD, YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss (local time), or ISO 8601 with timezone.
Tool | Actions | Notes |
|
| Priority, tags, subtasks. |
|
| Stored in the notes field (human-readable in Reminders.app). |
|
| Rename via |
|
| All-day inferred from date format. Cross-calendar moves unsupported. |
|
| Calendars holding ≥1 event in the (optional) |
Example calls:
{
"action": "create",
"title": "Buy groceries",
"dueDate": "2024-03-25 18:00:00",
"targetList": "Shopping",
"note": "Don't forget milk and eggs",
"priority": 1,
"tags": ["shopping", "errands"],
"subtasks": ["Milk", "Eggs", "Bread"]
}{ "action": "read", "filterList": "Work", "dueWithin": "today", "filterPriority": "high", "filterTags": ["urgent"] }{ "action": "update", "id": "reminder-123", "completed": false, "addTags": ["followup"] }{ "action": "toggle", "reminderId": "reminder-123", "subtaskId": "a1b2c3d4" }{ "action": "create", "name": "Project Alpha" }{ "action": "create", "title": "Team standup", "startDate": "2026-05-04 09:00:00", "endDate": "2026-05-04 09:30:00", "targetCalendar": "Work" }Read response shape
Read responses carry visual indicators: 🔄 recurring, 📍 location-based, 🏷️ has tags, 📋 has subtasks. Example:
- [ ] Buy groceries 🏷️📋
- List: Shopping
- ID: reminder-123
- Priority: high
- Tags: #shopping #errands
- Subtasks (1/3):
- [x] Milk
- [ ] Eggs
- [ ] Bread
- Due: 2024-03-25 18:00:00The url field is stored in the native url property (visible via the "i" icon in Reminders.app) and also appended to the notes in a structured URLs: block for parsing and multi-URL support. URLs accept any valid URI scheme (http, https, mailto, tel, obsidian, shortcuts, …); file, javascript, data, and similar dangerous schemes are rejected, and http(s) hostnames are checked against an SSRF blocklist.
Read-only fields: alarms, recurrence rules, location triggers, structured locations, calendar
url/availability/isAllDay, and cross-calendar moves are not writable via this server — they round-trip from values configured in Reminders.app / Calendar.app. See docs/migration-to-event-cli.md for the full dropped-field table and workarounds.
Structured Prompt Library
The server ships a prompt registry exposed via the MCP ListPrompts / GetPrompt endpoints. Each template shares a mission, context inputs, numbered process, constraints, output format, and quality bar so downstream assistants get predictable scaffolding.
daily-task-organizer — optional
today_focus; produces a same-day execution blueprint, balances priority work with recovery, auto-creates calendar time blocks for due-today reminders.smart-reminder-creator — optional
task_idea; generates an optimally scheduled reminder structure.reminder-review-assistant — optional
review_focus(e.g.overdueor a list name); audits and optimizes existing reminders.weekly-planning-workflow — optional
user_ideas; guides a Monday-through-Sunday reset with time blocks tied to existing lists.
Prompts are constrained to native Apple Reminders capabilities and ask for missing context before irreversible actions. Run pnpm test -- src/server/prompts.test.ts after amending prompt copy.
Development
pnpm install # postinstall builds bin/event from vendor/event on macOS
pnpm build # TypeScript + vendored event CLI
pnpm test # Jest suite: repositories, schemas, build script, prompt templates
pnpm exec biome check # lint + formatThe CLI entry point walks up to ten directories to find package.json, so the server can start from nested paths (e.g. dist/ or editor task runners) without losing bin/event. Keep the manifest reachable within that depth if you customize the folder layout.
Scripts
pnpm build— TypeScript + vendoredeventCLI (required before running from source)pnpm build:ts— TypeScript onlypnpm build:event— vendoredeventCLI only (swift build -c release→bin/event)pnpm build:release— build plus notarization (release packaging)pnpm test/pnpm test:ci— Jest suite / with coveragepnpm lint— Biome format/fix + TypeScript type checkpnpm check— lint + tests with coverage
License
MIT
Contributing
Contributions welcome! Please read the contributing guidelines first.
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