Google Calendar MCP Server
Provides tools for accessing and analyzing Google Calendar events, including listing calendars, creating/updating/deleting events, accepting/declining invitations, and querying meeting patterns across multiple Google accounts.
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., "@Google Calendar MCP ServerWhat's on my calendar today?"
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.
Google Calendar MCP Server
MCP server for accessing and analyzing Google Calendar events through the Model Context Protocol.
Features
📅 Access ALL your calendars - Primary, work, shared calendars, everything!
👥 Multi-account support - Use multiple Google accounts (e.g., personal + work) with automatic account selection
➕ Create calendar events - Schedule meetings with invites coming from the correct account
✅ Accept/decline invitations - Respond to calendar invites
🗑️ Delete events - Remove calendar entries
🔍 Find when you last met with someone
📊 Analyze meeting patterns and time blocks
🎯 Distinguish between deep work and flexible time blocks
⚡ Answer questions like "What do I need to be prepared for?"
🔗 Integrates with spark-mcp for unified meeting context
📋 List and search events across all your calendars at once
Related MCP server: Google Calendar MCP
Requirements
Python 3.10+
Google Cloud project with Calendar API enabled
OAuth2 credentials (see setup below)
Installation
# Install in development mode
pip install -e .Setup
1. Create Google Cloud Project
Go to Google Cloud Console
Create a new project:
Click "Select a project" at the top
Click "New Project"
Name:
Calendar MCP(or your choice)Click "Create"
Enable the Google Calendar API:
In left sidebar: "APIs & Services" → "Library"
Search for "Google Calendar API"
Click on it, then click "Enable"
2. Configure OAuth Consent Screen
Important: Do this BEFORE creating credentials
In left sidebar: "APIs & Services" → "OAuth consent screen"
If you see "Overview" page with metrics, look for navigation in left sidebar
Click on "Audience":
Click "ADD USERS"
Add your Google email address
Click "Add" then "Save"
Click on "Data Access" in left sidebar:
Click "Add or Remove Scopes"
Search for "Google Calendar API"
Check:
.../auth/calendar(full access for read/write operations)Click "Update"
Click "Save"
3. Create OAuth Client Credentials
In left sidebar: Click "Clients"
Click "CREATE CLIENT" or similar button
Choose:
Application type: Desktop app
Name:
calendar-mcp-client
Click "Create"
You'll see the client created - click on it
In "Client secrets" section:
Click "+ Add secret"
Copy the new secret OR click download
Download the JSON file (should auto-download or look for download option)
Save as
client_secret.jsonin/Users/feamster/src/calendar-mcp/
Note: The Google Cloud Console interface uses "OAuth Platform" with Audience/Data Access/Clients, not the old consent screen wizard.
4. Authenticate
Run the authentication setup:
python -m calendar_mcp.authThis will:
Open your browser for Google OAuth consent
Ask you to grant Calendar read and write permissions
Save the refresh token to
~/.mcp-auth/calendar/tokens/
Important: Google will show a warning "Google hasn't verified this app" because this is your personal project. This is normal and safe:
Click "Advanced"
Click "Go to Calendar MCP (unsafe)"
Grant the calendar read and write permissions
4b. Multi-Account Setup (Optional)
To use multiple Google accounts (e.g., personal + work), add each account:
# Add your first account
python -m calendar_mcp.auth add feamster@gmail.com
# Add your work account and set as default
python -m calendar_mcp.auth add feamster@uchicago.edu --default
# List configured accounts
python -m calendar_mcp.auth list
# Change default account
python -m calendar_mcp.auth default feamster@uchicago.eduHow multi-account works:
When creating events, the account is automatically selected based on the
calendarIdIf
calendarId="feamster@uchicago.edu", invites come FROM that accountIf
calendarId="feamster@gmail.com", invites come FROM that accountYou can also explicitly specify
accountparameter to override
Example usage after setup:
# Creates event on UChicago calendar, invite FROM feamster@uchicago.edu
create_event(summary="Meeting", calendarId="feamster@uchicago.edu", attendees=["someone@example.com"])
# Creates event on Gmail calendar, invite FROM feamster@gmail.com
create_event(summary="Personal", calendarId="feamster@gmail.com", attendees=["friend@example.com"])Calendar display names: calendarId accepts a calendar's display name in
addition to its raw id. create_event(calendarId="Chemster Events") resolves
to the underlying ...@group.calendar.google.com id by matching against the
summary/summaryOverride fields returned by list_all_calendars (case-
insensitive, trimmed). If a name is shared across accounts pass account=...
to disambiguate; an unknown name returns a structured error listing the
available calendars. primary and raw ids are passed through unchanged.
5. Configure Meeting Preferences (Optional)
Create ~/.mcp-config/calendar/config.json to customize your scheduling preferences:
{
"preferences": {
"timezone": "America/New_York",
"meetingPreferences": {
"preferAdjacentToMeetings": true,
"preferredMeetingDuration": 30,
"avoidDeepWorkBlocks": true,
"deepWorkBlockUsage": "end",
"neverAvailablePatterns": ["kids"],
"preferredDays": {
"Wednesday-PM": 100,
"Thursday": 100,
"Monday-PM": 70,
"Tuesday": 40,
"Friday": 40
},
"afternoonStartHour": 12,
"notes": "SCHEDULING PRIORITY: 1. BEST (100): Wed PM & Thu. 2. GOOD (70): Mon PM. 3. LAST RESORT (40): Tue & Fri. Prefer 30-min slots adjacent to meetings. Avoid deep work blocks. Never schedule over 'kids' blocks."
},
"flexibleBlockPatterns": ["flexible", "optional", "buffer", "hold"],
"deepWorkPatterns": ["deep work", "focus time", "writing", "research", "reading"]
}
}Meeting Preference Options:
preferAdjacentToMeetings: Suggest times next to existing meetingspreferredMeetingDuration: Default meeting length in minutesavoidDeepWorkBlocks: Try not to suggest deep work timedeepWorkBlockUsage:"end"= use end of block if needed,"start"= use start,"avoid"= never useneverAvailablePatterns: Keywords for completely unavailable blockspreferredDays: Day-of-week ranking system (0-100 scale)Higher scores = stronger preference (100 = most preferred, 40 = least preferred, 0 = avoid)
Use full day names:
"Monday","Tuesday","Wednesday","Thursday","Friday"For afternoon-only preferences:
"Monday-PM","Wednesday-PM", etc.Example ranking:
"Wednesday-PM": 100and"Thursday": 100= BEST days (strongly prefer)"Monday-PM": 70= GOOD day (acceptable)"Tuesday": 40and"Friday": 40= LAST RESORT (avoid if better options exist)
The MCP will prioritize suggesting times on higher-scored days
afternoonStartHour: Hour when afternoon starts (default: 12 = noon)notes: Human-readable description explaining your preferences for Claude to understand
6. Configure Claude Desktop
Add to your Claude Desktop config (~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json):
{
"mcpServers": {
"calendar": {
"command": "python",
"args": ["-m", "calendar_mcp.server"],
"cwd": "/Users/feamster/src/calendar-mcp"
}
}
}If you have other MCP servers (like spark-mcp), add the "calendar" section to your existing "mcpServers" object.
7. Test the Installation (Optional but Recommended)
Before configuring Claude Desktop, verify everything works:
python test_calendar.pyYou should see:
✓ Credentials loaded successfully
✓ Calendar client initialized
✓ Found X events
✓ All tests completed
8. Restart Claude Desktop
Restart Claude Desktop to load the new MCP server.
Usage
Once configured, ask Claude questions like:
Meeting Queries:
"What meetings do I have today?"
"Show me my calendar for the next week"
"What do I need to be prepared for?"
"Tell me about my 2pm meeting"
Relationship Tracking:
"When was the last time I met with john@example.com?"
"Show me all my meetings with the engineering team"
"Who do I meet with most often?"
Time Analysis:
"How many hours of meetings did I have this week?"
"Analyze my calendar blocks for today"
"Summarize my meetings from the past week"
"Am I free tomorrow at 2pm?"
Finding Meeting Times (with preferences):
"Find me times for a 30-minute meeting this week"
"When should I schedule a call with John?"
"What are my best meeting times next week?"
"Suggest times for a 1-hour meeting"
When finding meeting times, the MCP will:
Prioritize your preferred days (e.g., Wed PM & Thu over Tue & Fri)
Look for slots adjacent to existing meetings (if enabled)
Avoid deep work blocks (but use them as last resort if needed)
Never suggest times with "kids" or other never-available patterns
Managing Calendar Events:
"Create a meeting titled 'Project Review' tomorrow at 2pm for 1 hour"
"Schedule a 30-minute call with john@example.com on Thursday at 3pm"
"Add a meeting on Friday at 10am with sarah@example.com and bob@example.com"
"Delete the meeting about quarterly planning"
"Accept the invitation for tomorrow's standup"
"Decline the Friday afternoon meeting"
"Mark the project kickoff as tentative"
Integration with spark-mcp: If you have both calendar-mcp and spark-mcp installed:
"Show me the transcript from my meeting with X last Tuesday"
"Summarize all my meetings and their transcripts from last week"
"What were the action items from recent meetings?"
Available Tools
1. list_accounts
List all configured Google accounts for multi-account calendar access. Shows which accounts are set up and which is the default.
2. list_all_calendars
List all calendars you have access to (primary, work, shared, etc.)
3. list_calendar_events
List calendar events from ALL your calendars with filtering by time range, search query, etc. Each event shows which calendar it's from.
4. get_upcoming_meetings
Get upcoming meetings for preparation, includes time until meeting and attendee info.
5. find_meetings_with_person
Find when you last met with someone (by email or name).
6. get_meeting_by_id
Get full details of a specific calendar event.
7. analyze_time_blocks
Analyze calendar blocks and distinguish between deep work and flexible time.
8. summarize_meetings
Get summaries of meetings grouped by day, week, or person.
9. check_availability
Check if you're available at a proposed time.
10. find_meeting_times
Find best available meeting times based on your preferences (day ranking, adjacent to meetings, avoid deep work).
11. create_event
Create a new calendar event with optional attendees and automatic invitation emails. Multi-account: Automatically selects the correct Google account based on calendarId. Recurring events: Pass recurrence (structured) or recurrenceRrule (raw RFC 5545) to create a series:
# MWF for 3 weeks
recurrence = {"freq": "WEEKLY", "by_day": ["MO", "WE", "FR"], "until": "2026-07-24"}
# First Monday of every month, for a year
recurrence = {"freq": "MONTHLY", "by_day": ["MO"], "by_set_pos": [1], "count": 12}
# MWF for 3 weeks, skipping July 13
recurrence = {"freq": "WEEKLY", "by_day": ["MO", "WE", "FR"], "until": "2026-07-24", "exceptions": ["2026-07-13"]}Supported keys: freq (DAILY/WEEKLY/MONTHLY/YEARLY), interval, by_day, by_month_day, by_month, by_set_pos, count (mutually exclusive with until), until (ISO date or datetime — bare dates interpreted as end-of-day in start's timezone), exceptions (list of ISO dates to skip via EXDATE). The response includes an occurrence_count so you can verify the series size without listing instances.
12. update_event_recurrence
Modify the recurrence rule of an existing event without deleting and recreating:
scope="series"(default): replace the RRULE on the master event (passrecurrence=nullto clear).scope="this_and_following": split the series atsplitAt— shortens the original'sUNTILto just beforesplitAtand inserts a new event with the new rule starting atsplitAt.scope="single": apply the change to a single instance (pass the instance event id, not the master id).
13. delete_event
Delete a calendar event with optional cancellation notifications to attendees.
14. respond_to_event
Accept, decline, or tentatively accept a calendar invitation.
Block Type Detection
The server can distinguish between different types of calendar blocks:
Deep Work: Focus time, writing, research (hard blocks)
Flexible: Buffer time, optional blocks (can accommodate last-minute requests)
Meetings: Scheduled meetings
Out of Office: Hard blocks
Configure patterns in ~/.mcp-config/calendar/config.json:
{
"preferences": {
"flexibleBlockPatterns": ["flexible", "optional", "buffer"],
"deepWorkPatterns": ["deep work", "focus time", "writing", "research"]
}
}Integration with spark-mcp
If you have spark-mcp installed, the calendar MCP can cross-reference calendar events with meeting transcripts to provide unified context.
Troubleshooting
Authentication errors
Check credentials file exists:
ls ~/.mcp-auth/calendar/credentials.jsonRe-run authentication:
python -m calendar_mcp.authVerify API is enabled in Google Cloud Console
No events returned
Check date range in your query
Verify you have events in your Google Calendar
Check token has proper scopes
Server not connecting
Check Claude Desktop logs:
tail -f ~/Library/Logs/Claude/mcp-server-calendar.logVerify config syntax in
claude_desktop_config.jsonMake sure Python path is correct in config
Try running server directly to check for errors:
cd /Users/feamster/src/calendar-mcp python -m calendar_mcp.server # Should start without errors (Ctrl+C to exit)
"Google hasn't verified this app" warning
This is normal for personal projects. Your app is safe because you created it.
Solution:
Click "Advanced" on the warning page
Click "Go to Calendar MCP (unsafe)"
Grant the permissions
API quota exceeded
Google Calendar API has rate limits (1M queries/day). If you hit limits:
Wait a few minutes
Most queries use only 1-2 quota units
Normal usage won't hit limits
Testing & Development
Test Installation
# Test authentication status
python -m calendar_mcp.auth --test
# Run full test suite
python test_calendar.pyDevelopment Mode
# Install in development mode
pip install -e .
# Make changes to calendar_mcp/*.py files
# Restart Claude Desktop to reload changesProject Structure
calendar-mcp/
├── calendar_mcp/
│ ├── __init__.py
│ ├── auth.py # OAuth2 authentication (multi-account support)
│ ├── calendar_client.py # Google Calendar API wrapper
│ └── server.py # MCP server implementation
├── test_calendar.py # Test script
├── setup.py # Package installer
├── README.md # This file
├── SETUP.md # Detailed setup instructions
├── QUICKSTART.md # Quick start guide
└── SPEC.md # Technical specification
~/.mcp-config/calendar/
├── accounts.json # Multi-account configuration
└── config.json # User preferences (ignored calendars, meeting prefs)
~/.mcp-auth/calendar/
├── credentials.json # OAuth client credentials
└── tokens/ # Per-account OAuth tokens
├── feamster_at_gmail_com.json
└── feamster_at_uchicago_edu.jsonPrivacy & Security
Full calendar access: Requests
calendarscope for read and write operationsLocal credentials: Tokens stored locally in
~/.mcp-auth/calendar/No data caching: Doesn't cache calendar data
Secure token handling: Automatic refresh token management
Notification control: You can disable email notifications when creating/deleting events
Documentation
README.md (this file) - Overview and usage
QUICKSTART.md - Get started in 10 minutes
SETUP.md - Detailed setup instructions with troubleshooting
SPEC.md - Complete technical specification
Future Enhancements
See SPEC.md for detailed roadmap, including:
Action item extraction from meeting descriptions
Update existing events (modify time, location, description)
Smart scheduling suggestions
Advanced meeting analytics
Recurring meeting instance management (list/override individual instances of a series)
Cross-referencing with spark-mcp transcripts
License
MIT
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