The Model Context Protocol (MCP) is an open protocol designed to allow AI agents, IDEs, and automation tools to consume, query, and analyze structured data through context-aware APIs.
This server wraps Blockscout APIs and exposes blockchain data—balances, tokens, NFTs, contract metadata—via MCP so that AI agents and tools (like Claude, Cursor, or IDEs) can access and analyze it contextually.
Key Features:
- Contextual blockchain data access for AI tools
- Multi-chain support via getting Blockscout instance URLs from Chainscout
- Versioned REST API: Provides a standard, web-friendly interface to all MCP tools. See API.md for full documentation.
- Custom instructions for MCP host to use the server
- Intelligent context optimization to conserve LLM tokens while preserving data accessibility
- Smart response slicing with configurable page sizes to prevent context overflow
- Opaque cursor pagination using Base64URL-encoded strings instead of complex parameters
- Automatic truncation of large data fields with clear indicators and access guidance
- Standardized ToolResponse model with structured JSON responses and follow-up instructions
- Enhanced observability with MCP progress notifications and periodic updates for long-running operations
The easiest way to use the Blockscout MCP server with Claude ( Claude Web, Claude Desktop and Claude Code) is through the official Anthropic Connectors Directory. This provides a native, managed installation experience with automatic updates.
Visit claude.com/connectors/blockscout and click links in "Used in" section to install the Blockscout connector.
- Open Claude (Web or Desktop app)
- Go to Settings > Connectors > Browse connectors
- Search for "Blockscout"
- Click "Connect" to install
Note: Connectors require a paid Claude plan (Pro, Team, Max, or Enterprise).
To quickly install the Blockscout MCP server for use with Claude Code, run the following command in your terminal:
claude mcp add --transport http blockscout https://mcp.blockscout.com/mcpAfter running this command, Blockscout will be available as an MCP server in Claude Code, allowing you to access and analyze blockchain data directly from your coding environment.
Use this deeplink to install the Blockscout MCP server in Cursor.
-
Add the following configuration to your
~/.gemini/settings.jsonfile:{ "mcpServers": { "blockscout": { "httpUrl": "https://mcp.blockscout.com/mcp", "timeout": 180000 } } } -
For detailed Gemini CLI MCP server configuration instructions, see the official documentation.
Experience the power of the Blockscout MCP server through our showcase GPT: Blockscout X-Ray
This GPT demonstrates the full capabilities of the MCP server, providing intelligent blockchain analysis and insights. It's a great way to explore what's possible when AI agents have contextual access to blockchain data.
If you want to run the server locally for development purposes:
{
"mcpServers": {
"blockscout": {
"command": "docker",
"args": [
"run", "--rm", "-i",
"ghcr.io/blockscout/mcp-server:latest"
]
}
}
}Refer to SPEC.md for the technical details.
Refer to AGENTS.md for the repository structure.
Refer to TESTING.md for comprehensive instructions on running both unit and integration tests.
__unlock_blockchain_analysis__()- Provides custom instructions for the MCP host to use the server. This is a mandatory first step before using other tools.get_chains_list()- Returns a list of all known chains.get_address_by_ens_name(name)- Converts an ENS domain name to its corresponding Ethereum address.lookup_token_by_symbol(chain_id, symbol)- Searches for token addresses by symbol or name, returning multiple potential matches.get_contract_abi(chain_id, address)- Retrieves the ABI (Application Binary Interface) for a smart contract.inspect_contract_code(chain_id, address, file_name=None)- Allows getting the source files of verified contracts.get_address_info(chain_id, address)- Gets comprehensive information about an address including balance, ENS association, contract status, token details, and public tags.get_tokens_by_address(chain_id, address, cursor=None)- Returns detailed ERC20 token holdings for an address with enriched metadata and market data.get_block_number(chain_id, [datetime])- Retrieves the block number and timestamp for a specific date/time or the latest block.get_transactions_by_address(chain_id, address, age_from, age_to, methods, cursor=None)- Gets transactions for an address within a specific time range with optional method filtering.get_token_transfers_by_address(chain_id, address, age_from, age_to, token, cursor=None)- Returns ERC-20 token transfers for an address within a specific time range.nft_tokens_by_address(chain_id, address, cursor=None)- Retrieves NFT tokens owned by an address, grouped by collection.get_block_info(chain_id, number_or_hash, include_transactions=False)- Returns block information including timestamp, gas used, burnt fees, and transaction count. Can optionally include a list of transaction hashes.get_transaction_info(chain_id, hash, include_raw_input=False)- Gets comprehensive transaction information with decoded input parameters and detailed token transfers.read_contract(chain_id, address, abi, function_name, args='[]', block='latest')- Executes a read-only smart contract function and returns its result. Theabiargument is a JSON object describing the specific function's signature.direct_api_call(chain_id, endpoint_path, query_params=None, cursor=None)- Calls a curated raw Blockscout API endpoint for specialized or chain-specific data.
Is any approval set for OP token on Optimism chain by `zeaver.eth`?
Calculate the total gas fees paid on Ethereum by address `0xcafe...cafe` in May 2025.
Which 10 most recent logs were emitted by `0xFe89cc7aBB2C4183683ab71653C4cdc9B02D44b7`
before `Nov 08 2024 04:21:35 AM (-06:00 UTC)`?
Tell me more about the transaction `0xf8a55721f7e2dcf85690aaf81519f7bc820bc58a878fa5f81b12aef5ccda0efb`
on Redstone rollup.
Is there any blacklisting functionality of USDT token on Arbitrum One?
What is the latest block on Gnosis Chain and who is the block minter?
Were any funds moved from this minter recently?
When the most recent reward distribution of Kinto token was made to the wallet
`0x7D467D99028199D99B1c91850C4dea0c82aDDF52` in Kinto chain?
Which methods of `0x1c479675ad559DC151F6Ec7ed3FbF8ceE79582B6` on the Ethereum
mainnet could emit `SequencerBatchDelivered`?
What is the most recent executed cross-chain message sent from the Arbitrum Sepolia
rollup to the base layer?
Clone the repository and install dependencies:
git clone https://github.com/blockscout/mcp-server.git
cd mcp-server
uv pip install -e . # or `pip install -e .`To customize the leading part of the User-Agent header used for RPC requests,
set the BLOCKSCOUT_MCP_USER_AGENT environment variable (defaults to
"Blockscout MCP"). The server version is appended automatically.
The server runs in stdio mode by default:
python -m blockscout_mcp_serverHTTP Mode (MCP only):
To run the server in HTTP Streamable mode (stateless, SSE responses by default):
python -m blockscout_mcp_server --httpYou can also specify the host and port for the HTTP server:
python -m blockscout_mcp_server --http --http-host 0.0.0.0 --http-port 8080Development Mode (Plain JSON Responses):
For development and testing with simple HTTP clients (curl, Insomnia), you can enable plain JSON responses instead of SSE streams:
export BLOCKSCOUT_DEV_JSON_RESPONSE=true
python -m blockscout_mcp_server --httpNote: This disables Server-Sent Events (SSE) and progress notifications. Only use this for local testing and debugging.
Tunneling with Ngrok (Development Mode):
The Python MCP SDK enforces DNS rebinding protection, which blocks requests from ngrok tunnels by default. To enable tunneling for development and testing:
-
Start an ngrok tunnel to your local server:
ngrok http 8000
-
Configure the allowed host and origin using your ngrok URL:
export BLOCKSCOUT_MCP_ALLOWED_HOSTS="your-tunnel-id.ngrok-free.app" export BLOCKSCOUT_MCP_ALLOWED_ORIGINS="https://your-tunnel-id.ngrok-free.app" python -m blockscout_mcp_server --http
Note: These settings are primarily for development use. When these variables are not set, DNS rebinding protection
is automatically determined by the server's bind host: enabled for localhost, disabled for non-localhost (e.g.,
0.0.0.0). If your Host header includes a non-standard port, use the :* wildcard suffix (e.g.,
"example.com:*") or specify the exact host:port value.
For more details on ngrok tunneling with MCP servers, see the OpenAI Apps SDK Examples documentation.
HTTP Mode with REST API:
To enable the versioned REST API alongside the MCP endpoint, use the --rest flag (which requires --http).
python -m blockscout_mcp_server --http --restWith custom host and port:
python -m blockscout_mcp_server --http --rest --http-host 0.0.0.0 --http-port 8080CLI Options:
--http: Enables HTTP Streamable mode.--http-host TEXT: Host to bind the HTTP server to (default:127.0.0.1).--http-port INTEGER: Port for the HTTP server (default:8000).--rest: Enables the REST API (requires--http).
Build the Docker image with the official tag:
docker build -t ghcr.io/blockscout/mcp-server:latest .Pull the pre-built image:
docker pull ghcr.io/blockscout/mcp-server:latestHTTP Mode (MCP only):
To run the Docker container in HTTP mode with port mapping:
docker run --rm -p 8000:8000 ghcr.io/blockscout/mcp-server:latest python -m blockscout_mcp_server --http --http-host 0.0.0.0With custom port:
docker run --rm -p 8080:8080 ghcr.io/blockscout/mcp-server:latest python -m blockscout_mcp_server --http --http-host 0.0.0.0 --http-port 8080HTTP Mode with REST API:
To run with the REST API enabled:
docker run --rm -p 8000:8000 ghcr.io/blockscout/mcp-server:latest python -m blockscout_mcp_server --http --rest --http-host 0.0.0.0Note: When running in HTTP mode with Docker, use --http-host 0.0.0.0 to bind to all interfaces so the server is accessible from outside the container.
Stdio Mode: The default stdio mode is designed for use with MCP hosts/clients (like Claude Desktop, Cursor) and doesn't make sense to run directly with Docker without an MCP client managing the communication.
Use MCP bundle to test the server with Claude Desktop.
- Build the bundle as per instructions in mcpb/README.md.
- Open Claude Desktop.
- Double-click to open the
blockscout-mcp-dev.mcpbfile to automatically install the bundle. - Configure the Blockscout MCP Server URL when prompted (default:
http://127.0.0.1:8000/mcp)
To help us improve the Blockscout MCP Server, community-run instances of the server collect anonymous usage data by default. This helps us understand which tools are most popular and guides our development efforts.
What we collect:
- The name of the tool being called (e.g.,
get_block_number). - The parameters provided to the tool.
- The version of the Blockscout MCP Server being used.
What we DO NOT collect:
- We do not collect any personal data, IP addresses (the central server uses the sender's IP for geolocation via Mixpanel and then discards it), secrets, or private keys.
You can disable this feature at any time by setting the following environment variable:
export BLOCKSCOUT_DISABLE_COMMUNITY_TELEMETRY=trueThis project is primarily distributed under the terms of the MIT license. See LICENSE for details.