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yuens1002

bookie

by yuens1002

bookie

npm Publish to npm

An MCP server that keeps books for freelancers and landlords — driven from Claude or GPT instead of QuickBooks.

Ask your LLM to import a bank statement, categorize spending, reconcile a month, or generate a Schedule C. Bookie provides the correct double-entry ledger underneath — so the model reasons over real numbers, not a spreadsheet it's improvising on the fly.

This is for you if: you're a solopreneur, freelancer, or rental property owner already living in Claude or GPT, you're comfortable with a 5-minute setup, and you want books that are actually correct.

Not for you if: you want a dashboard UI, you need multi-user access, or you're satisfied with QuickBooks / a spreadsheet.

What you need before starting

  • Node ≥ 24

  • neonctlnpm install -g neonctl (free Neon account; needed for the DB)

  • An MCP-capable host: Claude Desktop, Claude.ai, Cursor, VS Code, or any host supporting the MCP stdio or HTTP transport

Related MCP server: accounting-mcp-server

Quick start (local, stdio)

Recommended — from source, fully automated:

git clone https://github.com/yuens1002/bookie
cd bookie
npm install
npm run setup   # creates Neon DB, generates secrets, writes .env, runs db:push
npm run build

npm run setup opens a browser to log into Neon; new to Neon? Use the "Sign up for an account" link and pick GitHub/Google/Microsoft rather than email+password — it completes in the same browser round-trip, no email-verification detour that could interrupt the CLI mid-wait.

npm run setup prints a ready-to-paste Claude Desktop config block at the end:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "bookie": {
      "command": "node",
      "args": ["/absolute/path/to/bookie/dist/index.js"],
      "env": {
        "BOOKIE_DB_URL": "<printed by setup>",
        "BOOKIE_DB_DIRECT_URL": "<printed by setup>",
        "BOOKIE_API_KEY": "<printed by setup>"
      }
    }
  }
}

Adding another machine to the same ledger — no clone needed: stdio is a local process — every machine running a stdio MCP client spawns its own copy of the server, so each one otherwise needs its own checkout. Once the Neon DB is provisioned (via npm run setup above, on any one machine), every other machine just needs the same connection strings — no git clone, no npm install, no npm run build to keep in sync. Point that machine's MCP host at the published package instead:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "bookie": {
      "command": "npx",
      "args": ["-y", "bookie-mcp"],
      "env": {
        "BOOKIE_DB_URL": "<same value as your first machine>",
        "BOOKIE_DB_DIRECT_URL": "<same value as your first machine>",
        "BOOKIE_API_KEY": "<same value as your first machine>"
      }
    }
  }
}

npx fetches and runs the published version on demand — every machine pointed at the same BOOKIE_DB_URL shares one ledger, without any of them (besides the original) needing a checkout.

Bootstrapping a DB without cloning at all: if you don't have connection strings yet from any machine (e.g. you created the Neon project manually instead of via npm run setup), push bookie's bundled schema directly:

mkdir bookie-mcp && cd bookie-mcp
npm install bookie-mcp
BOOKIE_DB_URL=<pooled> BOOKIE_DB_DIRECT_URL=<direct> npx prisma db push --schema=node_modules/bookie-mcp/prisma/schema.prisma

Then use the same npx -y bookie-mcp config above.

Quick start (remote, HTTP — for Claude.ai mobile)

Deploy to Railway with one click:

Deploy on Railway

Railway pulls the pre-built image from GHCR — no source build needed. Set the required env vars when prompted. See docs/DEPLOYING.md for the full walkthrough (env var reference, Neon + Resend setup, Claude.ai OAuth connector).

Why no UI?

The host LLM already reads CSVs, sees receipt images, and writes prose. Bookie owns the things an LLM shouldn't improvise: a correct double-entry ledger, integer-cent money math, deterministic categorization rules, and reproducible reports. The model handles language and vision; the server handles the books.

Tools

The full, always-current tool reference lives in docs/TOOLS.md (regenerate with npm run docs:tools). Today:

Tool

What it does

manage_accounts

Create/list/archive accounts (segment-scoped categories carry a tax line)

add_transaction

Record one balanced double-entry (money flows from → to)

split_transaction

One payment leg + N category legs (a receipt split across categories)

import_transactions

Import a bank/card CSV as balanced entries — preview → confirm, with dedup

manage_rules

Create/list/delete/test/suggest auto-categorization rules (categorize → account/property, or exclude) that power import-preview suggestions; action=suggest scans past categorizations and returns candidate rules for descriptions with 2+ occurrences

categorize_transaction

Re-categorize the income/expense leg of an existing entry — explicit account or apply a stored rule

reconcile

Match a bank/card statement CSV against the ledger and mark postings cleared — preview then commit

manage_receipts

Attach, list, delete, or get a signed download URL for receipt data; optionally upload the original file (JPEG, PNG, WEBP, HEIC, or PDF) to Railway Bucket storage

generate_report

Monthly reconciliation summary, or fiscal-year Schedule C / Schedule E tax P&L

export_report

Render any report as markdown or CSV

send_report

Run a report and email it via Resend

query_transactions

List entries + postings by date range / account

account_balances

Current balance per account

Resources

Bookie exposes two MCP resources that an LLM can read without calling a tool:

Resource URI

MIME type

What it contains

bookie://accounts

application/json

All active accounts with their current balances

bookie://reports/{year}

text/markdown

Annual fiscal snapshot: Schedule C, Schedule E, and a one-row-per-month summary (opening balance, net income, cleared postings count)

Prompts

Three canned workflow prompts guide the LLM through common bookkeeping tasks:

Prompt

Parameters

Purpose

monthly-close

year, month

Step-by-step month-end close: import CSV → categorize → reconcile → report → (optional) email

categorize-uncategorized

(none)

Find journal entries with no income/expense leg and walk through categorizing each

prepare-tax-summary

year

Generate Schedule C + E, export as markdown and CSV, optionally email

Configuration

See .env.example for the full reference. Key variables:

Variable

Purpose

BOOKIE_TRANSPORT

stdio (default) or http

BOOKIE_DB_URL

Neon pooled connection string

BOOKIE_DB_DIRECT_URL

Neon direct connection string (for db push)

BOOKIE_API_KEY

Static Bearer token (Claude Desktop / direct API)

PUBLIC_URL

Public HTTPS base URL of the deployed server (Claude.ai connector)

JWT_SECRET

HS256 signing secret for OAuth JWT access tokens

OAUTH_CLIENT_ID

OAuth client ID (default: claude-ai-connector)

OAUTH_CLIENT_SECRET

Required when using OAuth: /authorize refuses all requests when unset (prevents any visitor from authorizing); /token also validates it. Enter this value in the Claude.ai connector settings.

RESEND_API_KEY

Resend API key for send_report

RESEND_FROM

Verified sender address for send_report (e.g. Bookie <reports@yourdomain.com>)

AWS_ENDPOINT_URL / AWS_S3_BUCKET_NAME / AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID / AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY / AWS_DEFAULT_REGION

Railway Bucket credentials — auto-injected when you connect a bucket to the service (use AWS SDK Generic style); enables receipt file upload in manage_receipts

Docs

Safety

Bookie stores financial data in your Neon Postgres database; connection strings live in .env (gitignored) and Railway env vars — never commit them. The HTTP transport requires auth on every /mcp request: either a static Bearer token (BOOKIE_API_KEY) or an OAuth JWT issued by the /token endpoint. Always set at least one before exposing the server beyond localhost. See docs/DEPLOYING.md for the full Claude.ai connector OAuth setup.

License

MIT

A
license - permissive license
-
quality - not tested
A
maintenance

Maintenance

Maintainers
2hResponse time
2dRelease cycle
11Releases (12mo)
Commit activity
Issues opened vs closed

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