WhatsApp MCP

WhatsApp MCP

lharries

Send and receive WhatsApp messages directly through Claude, with access to your personal message history stored locally in SQLite.

Send and receive WhatsApp messages directly from Claude and other AI assistants. Search conversations, manage contacts, and automate WhatsApp workflows through the Model Context Protocol. 5,300+ GitHub stars.

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What it does

  • Send messages to individuals and groups
  • Search and read message history
  • Share images, videos, documents and audio files
  • Search contacts
  • Access media attachments from conversations

Best for

AI assistants managing personal communicationsAutomating WhatsApp workflows and responsesAnalyzing personal message patterns and history
Connects to personal WhatsApp accountMessages stored locally in SQLite5,300+ GitHub stars

About WhatsApp MCP

WhatsApp MCP is a community-built MCP server published by lharries that provides AI assistants with tools and capabilities via the Model Context Protocol. Send and receive WhatsApp messages from Claude and other AI assistants. Search chats, manage contacts, and automate work It is categorized under communication, developer tools.

How to install

You can install WhatsApp MCP in your AI client of choice. Use the install panel on this page to get one-click setup for Cursor, Claude Desktop, VS Code, and other MCP-compatible clients. This server runs locally on your machine via the stdio transport.

License

WhatsApp MCP is released under the MIT license. This is a permissive open-source license, meaning you can freely use, modify, and distribute the software.

WhatsApp MCP Server

This is a Model Context Protocol (MCP) server for WhatsApp.

With this you can search and read your personal Whatsapp messages (including images, videos, documents, and audio messages), search your contacts and send messages to either individuals or groups. You can also send media files including images, videos, documents, and audio messages.

It connects to your personal WhatsApp account directly via the Whatsapp web multidevice API (using the whatsmeow library). All your messages are stored locally in a SQLite database and only sent to an LLM (such as Claude) when the agent accesses them through tools (which you control).

Here's an example of what you can do when it's connected to Claude.

WhatsApp MCP

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Caution: as with many MCP servers, the WhatsApp MCP is subject to the lethal trifecta. This means that project injection could lead to private data exfiltration.

Installation

Prerequisites

  • Go
  • Python 3.6+
  • Anthropic Claude Desktop app (or Cursor)
  • UV (Python package manager), install with curl -LsSf https://astral.sh/uv/install.sh | sh
  • FFmpeg (optional) - Only needed for audio messages. If you want to send audio files as playable WhatsApp voice messages, they must be in .ogg Opus format. With FFmpeg installed, the MCP server will automatically convert non-Opus audio files. Without FFmpeg, you can still send raw audio files using the send_file tool.

Steps

  1. Clone this repository

    git clone https://github.com/lharries/whatsapp-mcp.git
    cd whatsapp-mcp
    
  2. Run the WhatsApp bridge

    Navigate to the whatsapp-bridge directory and run the Go application:

    cd whatsapp-bridge
    go run main.go
    

    The first time you run it, you will be prompted to scan a QR code. Scan the QR code with your WhatsApp mobile app to authenticate.

    After approximately 20 days, you will might need to re-authenticate.

  3. Connect to the MCP server

    Copy the below json with the appropriate {{PATH}} values:

    {
      "mcpServers": {
        "whatsapp": {
          "command": "{{PATH_TO_UV}}", // Run `which uv` and place the output here
          "args": [
            "--directory",
            "{{PATH_TO_SRC}}/whatsapp-mcp/whatsapp-mcp-server", // cd into the repo, run `pwd` and enter the output here + "/whatsapp-mcp-server"
            "run",
            "main.py"
          ]
        }
      }
    }
    

    For Claude, save this as claude_desktop_config.json in your Claude Desktop configuration directory at:

    ~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
    

    For Cursor, save this as mcp.json in your Cursor configuration directory at:

    ~/.cursor/mcp.json
    
  4. Restart Claude Desktop / Cursor

    Open Claude Desktop and you should now see WhatsApp as an available integration.

    Or restart Cursor.

Windows Compatibility

If you're running this project on Windows, be aware that go-sqlite3 requires CGO to be enabled in order to compile and work properly. By default, CGO is disabled on Windows, so you need to explicitly enable it and have a C compiler installed.

Steps to get it working:

  1. Install a C compiler
    We recommend using MSYS2 to install a C compiler for Windows. After installing MSYS2, make sure to add the ucrt64\bin folder to your PATH.
    → A step-by-step guide is available here.

  2. Enable CGO and run the app

    cd whatsapp-bridge
    go env -w CGO_ENABLED=1
    go run main.go
    

Without this setup, you'll likely run into errors like:

Binary was compiled with 'CGO_ENABLED=0', go-sqlite3 requires cgo to work.

Architecture Overview

This application consists of two main components:

  1. Go WhatsApp Bridge (whatsapp-bridge/): A Go application that connects to WhatsApp's web API, handles authentication via QR code, and stores message history in SQLite. It serves as the bridge between WhatsApp and the MCP server.

  2. Python MCP Server (whatsapp-mcp-server/): A Python server implementing the Model Context Protocol (MCP), which provides standardized tools for Claude to interact with WhatsApp data and send/receive messages.

Data Storage

  • All message history is stored in a SQLite database within the whatsapp-bridge/store/ directory
  • The database maintains tables for chats and messages
  • Messages are indexed for efficient searching and retrieval

Usage

Once connected, you can interact with your WhatsApp contacts through Claude, leveraging Claude's AI capabilities in your WhatsApp conversations.

MCP Tools

Claude can access the following tools to interact with WhatsApp:

  • search_contacts: Search for contacts by name or phone number
  • list_messages: Retrieve messages with optional filters and context
  • list_chats: List available chats with metadata
  • get_chat: Get information about a specific chat
  • get_direct_chat_by_contact: Find a direct chat with a specific contact
  • get_contact_chats: List all chats involving a specific contact
  • get_last_interaction: Get the most recent message with a contact
  • get_message_context: Retrieve context around a specific message
  • send_message: Send a WhatsApp message to a specified phone number or group JID
  • send_file: Send a file (image, video, raw audio, document) to a specified recipient
  • send_audio_message: Send an audio file as a WhatsApp voice message (requires the file to be an .ogg opus file or ffmpeg must be installed)
  • download_media: Download media from a WhatsApp message and get the local file path

Media Handling Features

The MCP server supports both sending and receiving various media types:

Media Sending

You can send various media types to your WhatsApp contacts:

  • Images, Videos, Documents: Use the send_file tool to share any supported media type.
  • Voice Messages: Use the send_audio_message tool to send audio files as playable WhatsApp voice messages.
    • For optimal compatibility, audio files should be in .ogg Opus format.
    • With FFmpeg installed, the system will automatically convert other audio formats (MP3, WAV, etc.) to the required format.
    • Without FFmpeg, you can still send raw audio files using the send_file tool, but they won't appear as playable voice messages.

Media Downloading

By default, just the metadata of the media is stored in the local database. The message will indicate that media was sent. To access this media you need to use the download_media tool which takes the message_id and chat_jid (which are shown when printing messages containing the meda), this downloads the media and then returns the file path which can be then opened or passed to another tool.

Technical Details

  1. Claude sends requests to the Python MCP server
  2. The MCP server queries the Go bridge for WhatsApp data or directly to the SQLite database
  3. The Go accesses the WhatsApp API and keeps the SQLite database up to date
  4. Data flows back through the chain to Claude
  5. When sending messages, the request flows from Claude through the MCP server to the Go bridge and to WhatsApp

Troubleshooting

  • If you encounter permission issues when running uv, you may need to add it to your PATH or use the full path to the executable.
  • Make sure both the Go application and the Python server are running for the integration to work properly.

Authentication Issues

  • QR Code Not Displaying: If the QR code doesn't appear, try restarting the authentication script. If issues persist, check if your terminal supports displaying QR codes.
  • WhatsApp Already Logged In: If your session is already active, the Go bridge will automatically reconnect without showing a QR code.
  • Device Limit Reached: WhatsApp limits the number of linked devices. If you reach this limit, you'll need to remove an existing device from WhatsApp on your phone (Settings > Linked Devices).
  • No Messages Loading: After initial authentication, it can take several minutes for your message history to load, especially if you have many chats.
  • WhatsApp Out of Sync: If your WhatsApp messages get out of sync with the bridge, delete both database files (whatsapp-bridge/store/messages.db and whatsapp-bridge/store/whatsapp.db) and restart the bridge to re-authenticate.

For additional Claude Desktop integration troubleshooting, see the MCP documentation. The documentation includes helpful tips for checking logs and resolving common issues.

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