A Model Context Protocol (MCP) server for WhatsApp Web, implemented in TypeScript. This project is a TypeScript port of the original whatsapp-mcp repository.
With this MCP server, you can:
- Search and read your personal WhatsApp messages (including media)
- Search your contacts
- Send messages to individuals or groups
- Send and receive media files (images, videos, documents, audio)
- TypeScript Implementation: Fully typed codebase for better developer experience and code reliability
- WhatsApp Web Integration: Uses whatsapp-web.js for direct connection to WhatsApp Web
- MCP Server: Implements the Model Context Protocol for seamless integration with AI assistants
- Media Support: Send and receive images, videos, documents, and audio messages
- Multiple Transport Options: Supports both stdio and SSE transports for flexible integration
This MCP server consists of:
- TypeScript MCP Server: Implements the Model Context Protocol to provide standardized tools for AI assistants to interact with WhatsApp
- WhatsApp Web Service: Connects to WhatsApp Web via whatsapp-web.js, handles authentication, and manages message sending/receiving
- Tool Implementations: Provides various tools for contacts, chats, messages, media, and authentication
- Node.js >= 18.0.0
- npm or yarn
- Chrome/Chromium (used by Puppeteer for WhatsApp Web connection)
- FFmpeg (optional, for audio message conversion)
-
Clone this repository
git clone https://github.com/mario-andreschak/mcp-whatsapp-web.git cd mcp-whatsapp-web -
Install dependencies
npm install
-
Build the project
npm run build
-
Configure environment variables (optional)
Copy the example environment file and modify as needed:
cp .env.example .env
You can adjust logging levels and specify paths to FFmpeg if needed.
FLUJO provides a streamlined installation process:
- Navigate to the MCP section in FLUJO
- Click "Add Server"
- Copy and paste this GitHub repository URL:
https://github.com/mario-andreschak/mcp-whatsapp-web - Click "Parse", "Clone, "Install", "Build" and "Update Server"
FLUJO will automatically handle the cloning, dependency installation, and building process for you.
npm startThis will start the MCP server using stdio transport by default, which is suitable for integration with Claude Desktop or similar applications.
Important: After starting the server for the first time, you must authenticate with WhatsApp by using the
get_qr_codetool and scanning the QR code with your phone. See the Authentication section for detailed instructions.
npm run devThis starts the server in development mode with TypeScript watch mode and automatic server restarts.
npm run debugThis launches the MCP Inspector tool, which provides a web interface for testing and debugging your MCP server. The inspector allows you to:
- View all available tools and their schemas
- Execute tools directly and see their responses
- Test your server without needing to connect it to an AI assistant
- Debug tool execution and inspect responses
-
Create a configuration file for Claude Desktop:
{ "mcpServers": { "whatsapp": { "command": "node", "args": [ "PATH_TO/dist/index.js" ] } } }Replace
PATH_TOwith the absolute path to the repository. -
Save this as
claude_desktop_config.jsonin your Claude Desktop configuration directory:- macOS:
~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json - Windows:
%APPDATA%\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json - Linux:
~/.config/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
- macOS:
-
Restart Claude Desktop
-
Create a configuration file for Cursor:
{ "mcpServers": { "whatsapp": { "command": "node", "args": [ "PATH_TO/dist/index.js" ] } } }Replace
PATH_TOwith the absolute path to the repository. -
Save this as
mcp.jsonin your Cursor configuration directory:- macOS/Linux:
~/.cursor/mcp.json - Windows:
%USERPROFILE%\.cursor\mcp.json
- macOS/Linux:
-
Restart Cursor
The first time you run the server, you'll need to authenticate with WhatsApp:
- Start the MCP server
- Important: You must use the
get_qr_codetool to generate a QR code- In Claude or other AI assistants, explicitly ask to "use the get_qr_code tool to authenticate WhatsApp"
- The assistant will call this tool and display the QR code image
- Scan the QR code with your WhatsApp mobile app
- Open WhatsApp on your phone
- Go to Settings > Linked Devices > Link a Device
- Point your phone camera at the QR code displayed
Your session will be saved locally in the whatsapp-sessions directory and will be reused automatically on subsequent runs. If you don't authenticate using the QR code, you won't be able to use any WhatsApp functionality.
You can check your current authentication status and manage your session:
- Use the
check_auth_statustool to verify if you're currently authenticated - If you need to authenticate with a different WhatsApp account or re-authenticate:
- Use the
logouttool to log out from your current session - Then use the
get_qr_codetool to authenticate with a new QR code
- Use the
This is particularly useful when:
- You want to switch between different WhatsApp accounts
- Your session has expired or been invalidated
- You're experiencing connection issues and need to re-authenticate
get_qr_code- Get the QR code for WhatsApp Web authenticationcheck_auth_status- Check if you're currently authenticated with WhatsApplogout- Log out from WhatsApp and clear the current session
search_contacts- Search for contacts by name or phone numberget_contact- Get information about a specific contact
list_chats- List available chats with metadataget_chat- Get information about a specific chatget_direct_chat_by_contact- Find a direct chat with a specific contact
list_messages- Retrieve messages with optional filtersget_message- Get a specific message by IDsend_message- Send a text message to a chat
send_file- Send a file (image, video, document) to a chatsend_audio_message- Send an audio message (voice note)download_media- Download media from a message
This MCP server uses Puppeteer to control Chrome browsers for WhatsApp Web connectivity. The server includes a robust browser process management system to prevent orphaned Chrome processes.
The server automatically:
- Tracks Chrome browser processes using a PID tracking system
- Cleans up orphaned processes on startup
- Properly closes browser processes during shutdown
- Maintains a record of browser PIDs in
.chrome-pids.json
If you notice orphaned Chrome processes that weren't automatically cleaned up, you can use the included cleanup utility:
npm run cleanup-browsersThis utility will:
- Scan for Chrome processes that might be related to WhatsApp Web
- Display a list of potentially orphaned processes
- Ask for confirmation before terminating them
- Clean up the PID tracking file
src/index.ts- Entry pointsrc/server.ts- MCP server implementationsrc/services/whatsapp.ts- WhatsApp Web servicesrc/tools/- Tool implementations for various WhatsApp featuressrc/types/- TypeScript type definitionssrc/utils/- Utility functions
npm run build- Build the TypeScript codenpm run dev- Run in development mode with watchnpm run lint- Run ESLintnpm run format- Format code with Prettiernpm run cleanup-browsers- Detect and clean up orphaned Chrome browser processes
- If the QR code doesn't appear, try restarting the server
- If you're already authenticated, no QR code will be shown (use
check_auth_statusto verify) - If you need to re-authenticate, use the
logouttool first, then request a new QR code - WhatsApp limits the number of linked devices; you may need to remove an existing device
- If you receive a message saying "No QR code is currently available," but you're already authenticated, this is normal behavior - use
check_auth_statusto confirm your authentication status
- Make sure you have a stable internet connection
- If the connection fails, try restarting the server
- Check the logs for detailed error messages
- If you notice high CPU usage or memory consumption, there might be orphaned Chrome processes
- Run
npm run cleanup-browsersto detect and clean up orphaned processes - If the server crashes frequently, check for orphaned processes and clean them up
- On Windows, you can also use Task Manager to look for multiple Chrome processes with "headless" in the command line
- On Linux/macOS, use
ps aux | grep chrometo check for orphaned processes
MIT
This project is a TypeScript port of the original whatsapp-mcp by lharries.

