Chrome DevTools MCP
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-Pro
Overview
Key features
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.
Disclaimers
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.
Requirements
Node.js v20.19 or a newer latest maintenance LTS version.
Chrome current stable version or newer.
npm.
Getting started
Add the following config to your MCP client:
{
"mcpServers": {
"chrome-devtools": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "chrome-devtools-mcp@latest"]
}
}
}
[!NOTE]
Usingchrome-devtools-mcp@latestensures that your MCP client will always use the latest version of the Chrome DevTools MCP server.
MCP Client configuration
claude mcp add chrome-devtools npx chrome-devtools-mcp@latest
codex mcp add chrome-devtools -- npx chrome-devtools-mcp@latest
On Windows 11
Configure the Chrome install location and increase the startup timeout by updating .codex/config.toml and adding the following env and startup_timeout_ms parameters:
[mcp_servers.chrome-devtools]
command = "cmd"
args = [
"/c",
"npx",
"-y",
"chrome-devtools-mcp@latest",
]
env = { SystemRoot="C:\\Windows", PROGRAMFILES="C:\\Program Files" }
startup_timeout_ms = 20_000
Start Copilot CLI:
copilot
Start the dialog to add a new MCP server by running:
/mcp add
Configure the following fields and press CTR-S to save the configuration:
Server name:
chrome-devtoolsServer Type:
[1] LocalCommand:
npxArguments:
-y, chrome-devtools-mcp@latest
code --add-mcp '{"name":"chrome-devtools","command":"npx","args":["chrome-devtools-mcp@latest"]}'
Click the button to install:
Or install manually:
Go to Cursor Settings -> MCP -> New MCP Server. Use the config provided above.
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.
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.
Click the button to install:
Go to Settings | AI | Manage MCP Servers -> + Add to add an MCP Server. Use the config provided above.
Your first prompt
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.
Tools
If you run into any issues, checkout our troubleshooting guide.
Input automation (7 tools)
clickdragfillfill_formhandle_dialoghoverupload_file
Navigation automation (7 tools)
close_pagelist_pagesnavigate_pagenavigate_page_historynew_pageselect_pagewait_for
Emulation (3 tools)
emulate_cpuemulate_networkresize_page
Performance (3 tools)
performance_analyze_insightperformance_start_traceperformance_stop_trace
Network (2 tools)
get_network_requestlist_network_requests
Debugging (4 tools)
evaluate_scriptlist_console_messagestake_screenshottake_snapshot
Configuration
The Chrome DevTools MCP server supports the following configuration option:
--browserUrl,-uConnect to a running Chrome instance using port forwarding. For more details see: https://developer.chrome.com/docs/devtools/remote-debugging/local-server.Type: string
--headlessWhether to run in headless (no UI) mode.Type: boolean
Default:
false
--executablePath,-ePath to custom Chrome executable.Type: string
--isolatedIf specified, creates a temporary user-data-dir that is automatically cleaned up after the browser is closed.Type: boolean
Default:
false
--channelSpecify a different Chrome channel that should be used. The default is the stable channel version.Type: string
Choices:
stable,canary,beta,dev
--logFilePath to a file to write debug logs to. Set the env variableDEBUGto*to enable verbose logs. Useful for submitting bug reports.Type: string
--viewportInitial viewport size for the Chrome instances started by the server. For example,1280x720Type: string
--proxyServerProxy server configuration for Chrome passed as --proxy-server when launching the browser. See https://www.chromium.org/developers/design-documents/network-settings/ for details.Type: string
--acceptInsecureCertsIf enabled, ignores errors relative to self-signed and expired certificates. Use with caution.Type: boolean
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.
Concepts
User data directory
chrome-devtools-mcp starts a Chrome's stable channel instance using the following user data directory:
Linux / MacOS:
$HOME/.cache/chrome-devtools-mcp/chrome-profile-$CHANNELWindows:
%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.
Known limitations
Operating system sandboxes
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.
Installation
Visit the GitHub repository for installation instructions and setup guide.
View installation guide