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The 22 Best Slack MCP Servers & Integrations (2026 Guide)

June 18, 2026

Slack just made Slackbot a universal connector for the rest of your stack. With the new Slackbot MCP client, generally available this week, you connect apps like Reclaim, Linear, and Webflow through their Slack MCP servers and then get work done by asking in plain language. When you need something done, you ask in the channel and Slackbot passes the request to whichever connected app handles it. The result comes back in the same conversation.

However, "Slack MCP server" means three different things. Slack's own official server and a handful of open-source servers you run yourself both let an outside AI tool reach into Slack. The new partner ecosystem runs the other direction, with Slackbot reaching out to call an app like Reclaim, no code required.

What is a Slack MCP server?

In this launch, the "server" is one half of a pair. MCP stands for Model Context Protocol, an open standard that gives AI agents a consistent, secure way to use outside tools and data. Each partner app runs its own MCP server; Slackbot runs the matching MCP client, now generally available, that reaches out to those servers for you.


You ask in plain language, Slackbot figures out which app can help, calls its server, and delivers the result in the conversation. Behind the scenes, MCP defines three pieces:

  • The host is the app you talk to: Slackbot, inside Slack.
  • The client speaks MCP. Slackbot's new MCP client is the universal connector to your apps.
  • The server is the secure gateway to a specific system, and each partner app runs one.

Unlike a traditional API, where a developer codes calls to specific endpoints, Slackbot can ask an app's server at runtime what it can do and get a list of tools to use on the spot, with no integration hand-coded for every task.

The news is technically Slackbot's MCP client, but each app you connect is an MCP server, so "Slack MCP server integrations" describes the same thing. The separate inbound official Slack MCP server at mcp.slack.com lets outside AI tools like Claude or Cursor reach into Slack.

What the Slackbot MCP client can do

  • Ask in plain language: Slackbot picks and calls the right app, no slash commands or menus.
  • Take actions, not just answers: Sign a document, update a ticket, or reschedule a meeting from the conversation.
  • See interactive results in-thread: Previews, dashboards, and forms rendered with Slack's Block Kit, not a flat link out.
  • Connect almost any app: A registry partner app, a Salesforce product, or a tool your team built that exposes an MCP server.

The best Slack MCP server integrations

The new MCP registry is the heart of this launch: finished apps you connect to Slackbot in the Slack Marketplace, then run by asking. Slackbot routes each request to the right app and renders the result in the thread, often as an interactive Block Kit card.

ToolCategoryBest forPlan
Reclaim.aiBusiness ops & agreementsScheduling & focus managementFree & paid
LinearProduct & developmentTracking what's blocking a releaseFree & paid
Atlassian RovoProduct & developmentJira/Confluence context in chatFree & paid tiers
ReplitProduct & developmentPrototyping ideas into codeFree
WebflowDocument & contentDiscussion to a published pageFree & paid
GammaDocument & contentGenerating decks from contentFree & paid
CanvaCreative & designPulling design assets for reviewFree & paid
MiroCreative & designWhiteboards in the threadFree
ZoomBusiness ops & agreementsMeeting intelligence in SlackFree & paid
AmplitudeVisual collab & analyticsProduct analytics on demandFree
MuleSoftProduct & developmentConnecting enterprise systems & APIsPaid
VercelProduct & developmentShipping & debugging deploymentsFree & paid
FigmaCreative & designDesign context in the threadFree & paid
BrexBusiness ops & agreementsSpend & expense questionsPaid
HiBobBusiness ops & agreementsPeople & HR dataPaid
IroncladBusiness ops & agreementsFinding contract answers fastPaid
LucidchartVisual collab & analyticsDiagrams in the conversationFree & paid
LucidsparkVisual collab & analyticsBrainstorms & whiteboardsFree & paid
Notion (soon)Document & contentSearching docs & knowledgeFree & paid
PagerDuty (soon)Product & developmentIncidents & on-callFree & paid
Adobe (soon)Creative & designOn-brand creative contentFree & paid
Tableau Next (soon)Visual collab & analyticsGoverned analytics on demandPaid

1. Reclaim.ai – best for scheduling & focus

Best for: AI scheduling and focus management without leaving Slack

How it works: Connect your Reclaim account once, then Slackbot calls its calendar, task, and habit tools on your behalf in plain language.

Reclaim is an AI calendar assistant, listed in the registry under business operations and agreements. Its native MCP support exposes your calendar, tasks, habits, and focus time, so from Slack you can find time with teammates, reschedule, protect Focus Time, check your agenda, or analyze your workload. With Reclaim 2.0, every change lands in a preview sandbox first, so a human approves before anything hits your calendar.

  • Find time, create or reschedule events, and defend Focus Time.
  • Check your agenda and analyze where your week went.
  • Preview mode means the AI proposes and you approve every change.

Reclaim pricing: Free → paid plans start at $10/month.

2. Linear – best for tracking what's blocking a release

Best for: Engineering teams running sprints in Slack

How it works: Connect via OAuth and Slackbot discovers Linear's issue, project, and cycle tools, with reads and writes scoped to your access.

Linear's MCP server lets Slackbot read and write your issues, projects, and cycles. Ask which tickets are blocking a release and it pulls the blockers into the thread; an action item from a discussion can become an assigned ticket without copy-pasting.

  • Search, create, and update issues; browse projects, cycles, and statuses.
  • Turn a Slack thread's action items into assigned tickets.
  • Reassign and reprioritize from interactive buttons in the channel.

Linear pricing: Free → paid plans start at $10/month.

3. Atlassian Rovo – best for Jira & Confluence context

Best for: Teams whose work spans the Atlassian suite

How it works: An OAuth bridge to Jira, Confluence, and Compass; queries run as you and Atlassian stores none of your content.

Rovo's MCP server is a secure bridge to Jira, Confluence, and Compass that taps Atlassian's Teamwork Graph for cross-tool context. It doesn't store your content and acts only within the signed-in user's permissions, so answers stay scoped to what you can already see.

  • Search and summarize Jira issues and Confluence pages from Slack.
  • Create or update issues and pages with natural language.
  • Generate tickets from meeting notes or a spec in the thread.

Atlassian Rovo pricing: Included with paid Atlassian Cloud plans, with Rovo Dev from $20/month.

4. Replit – best for turning an idea into working code

Best for: Fast prototyping without leaving the conversation

How it works: Describe what you want and Replit returns a working prototype you can open and iterate on from the thread.

Replit lets you build and prototype instantly. Describe what you want in Slack and Replit spins up working code you can iterate on, so a rough idea in a channel becomes something runnable instead of a backlog note.

  • Generate and run prototypes from a plain-language brief.
  • Iterate on the result and share it back into the channel.

Replit pricing: Free → paid plans start at $25/month.

5. Webflow – best for going from a discussion to a published page

Best for: Marketing and web teams who publish from chat

How it works: Webflow's CMS and Designer APIs are exposed as MCP tools, and each action runs with your site permissions.

Webflow's MCP server exposes its CMS and Designer APIs as tools. From Slack you can update CMS content, edit SEO metadata, and audit a site for broken links or missing alt text, closing the gap between an idea in a channel and a live page.

  • Create and update CMS items; manage assets and metadata.
  • Update SEO titles, descriptions, and Open Graph tags.
  • Audit pages for broken links and missing alt text.

Webflow pricing: Free → paid plans start at $15/month.

6. Gamma – best for generating presentations from your content

Best for: Turning a thread or outline into an on-brand deck

How it works: A hosted MCP server generates on your behalf; outputs draw on your Gamma credits and come back as an editable share link.

Gamma's hosted MCP server creates gammas on your behalf: presentations, documents, webpages, and social posts. Hand it the notes from a channel and it drafts a deck with your theme, then hands back a share link you can refine.

  • Generate decks, docs, webpages, and social posts from a prompt.
  • Generate from an existing template to keep layout consistent.
  • Read existing gammas and export to PPTX or PDF.

Gamma pricing: Free → paid plans start at $10/month.

7. Canva – best for pulling design assets in for review

Best for: Fast design feedback in a channel

How it works: A remote MCP server with per-user auth, so each teammate signs in to their own Canva account.

Canva's remote MCP server exposes design creation, editing, library search, export, and commenting. Ask for the latest social layouts and the campaign mood board and Slackbot presents them for the team to react to. Each person authenticates their own Canva account.

  • Create and edit designs from natural language.
  • Search your design library and export in multiple formats.
  • Add comments; access is per-user, so each teammate signs in.

Canva pricing: Free → paid plans start at $15/month.

8. Miro – best for whiteboards in the thread

Best for: Visual ideation without opening another tab

How it works: Connect your Miro account and Slackbot surfaces and updates the boards you have access to.

Miro brings your boards into the conversation. Pull a mood board or whiteboard into a channel so scattered feedback becomes one fast, shared review, and the team can shape the diagram together right where they're talking.

  • Surface boards and visual content inside Slack.
  • Turn comments across a thread into one shared review.

Miro pricing: Free → paid plans start at $10/month.

9. Zoom – best for meeting intelligence in Slack

Best for: Pulling meeting context into the conversation

How it works: Taps Zoom AI Companion for meeting data and can reason across Meetings, Chat, and Phone within your access.

Zoom's MCP server brings AI Companion meeting intelligence into Slack: summaries, transcripts, recordings, action items, and your personal My Notes. You can also schedule and start meetings, and agentic search can reason across Zoom Meetings, Chat, and Phone.

  • Retrieve meeting summaries, transcripts, recordings, and action items.
  • Schedule and start meetings from a message.
  • Search across Zoom conversation history for context.

Zoom pricing: Free → paid plans start at $16.99/month.

10. Amplitude – best for product analytics on demand

Best for: Answers about user behavior without SQL or a dashboard

How it works: Plain-language questions become Amplitude queries that run on your existing project permissions.

Amplitude's MCP server lets anyone ask questions about product data in plain language. Ask about a conversion drop-off or a retention trend and it queries funnels, cohorts, experiments, and session replays, then can build a chart, all on your existing Amplitude permissions.

  • Query funnels, retention, cohorts, and experiment results.
  • Search and create charts, dashboards, and notebooks.
  • Runs on your account permissions; no extra data access.

Amplitude pricing: Free → paid plans start at $49/month.

11. MuleSoft – best for connecting enterprise systems & APIs

Best for: Bringing legacy systems, databases, and custom APIs into Slack

How it works: The Anypoint MCP Connector publishes existing Mule apps and APIs as governed MCP tools over Streamable HTTP.

MuleSoft turns the APIs, SaaS integrations, and legacy systems you already run into governed, agent-ready MCP tools. Using the Anypoint MCP Connector, teams expose existing integrations with no major rewrites, so Slackbot can query enterprise data or trigger a multi-step workflow across systems that never spoke to Slack before.

  • Make existing APIs, databases, and legacy systems callable from Slack.
  • Trigger multi-step workflows across connected enterprise systems.
  • Governance and access controls travel with every exposed tool.

MuleSoft pricing: Custom pricing, contact sales.

12. Vercel – best for shipping & debugging deployments

Best for: Front-end teams who live in deployments and logs

How it works: A remote, OAuth-based server (mcp.vercel.com) that exposes read tools for projects, deployments, and logs.

Vercel's official MCP server gives Slackbot secure, OAuth-based access to your projects, deployments, and logs. When a build breaks, ask why and it pulls the relevant logs to analyze; check which projects or teams you can access without opening the dashboard. It runs on your account's permissions and is read-focused today.

  • Fetch projects, teams, and deployment status.
  • Retrieve deployment logs to diagnose failures.
  • Search Vercel's docs for configuration answers.

Vercel pricing: Free → paid plans start at $20/month.

13. Figma – best for pulling design context into the conversation

Best for: Design-to-build handoffs in a channel

How it works: Connect Figma's remote MCP server (mcp.figma.com) and Slackbot calls tools like design-system search and frame context.

Figma's MCP server brings design context into Slack. Search your design system for components, variables, and styles, pull context and production-ready code from a specific frame, or generate a FigJam diagram from a description. It works across Figma Design, FigJam, and Slides.

  • Search the design system for components, variables, and styles.
  • Pull design context and code from a specific frame.
  • Generate diagrams and create or edit Figma content.

Figma pricing: Free → paid plans start at $16/month.

14. Brex – best for spend & expense questions

Best for: Finance teams and managers tracking spend without the dashboard

How it works: Connect with OAuth and your Brex capabilities carry over; approvals and card management aren't exposed yet.

Brex's MCP server lets Slackbot answer questions about your spend. List and filter expenses, check spend limits and remaining budget, find transactions by merchant or amount, and flag expenses missing receipts or memos. Admins can ask company-wide spend questions, and your Brex permissions carry over so you only see what you're allowed to.

  • Review expenses, budgets, spend limits, and bills.
  • Find transactions by merchant, amount, date, or limit.
  • Update memos and attach receipts on your own expenses.

Brex pricing: Free → paid plans start at $12/month.

15. HiBob – best for people & HR data

Best for: Managers and HR answering people questions in Slack

How it works: A hosted MCP server scoped to your Bob service-user or OAuth permissions, so people see only fields they're cleared for.

HiBob's MCP server connects Slackbot to Bob, so you can ask who's starting next week, look up an employee's details, check time-off balances, or update a record in plain language. Every request respects HiBob's role-based permissions, so people only see what they're cleared to see.

  • Find employees and read profile fields you're permitted to view.
  • Check who's out and time-off balances; submit requests.
  • Read and update records and manage HR tasks.

HiBob pricing: Custom pricing, contact sales.

16. Ironclad – best for finding contract answers fast

Best for: Legal and procurement searching agreements in plain English

How it works: An OAuth connection exposes Conversational Search as a single read-only, permission-aware tool.

Ironclad's MCP server exposes its Conversational Search, the same AI engine behind Ironclad's dashboard. Ask something like "NDAs governed by California law expiring in the next 12 months" and get back only the contracts you're authorized to see. It's read-only and permission-aware by design.

  • Search executed contracts, workflows, and records in plain language.
  • Surface obligations, renewal dates, and clause-level filters.
  • Results scoped to your Ironclad permissions; read-only.

Ironclad pricing: Custom pricing, contact sales.

17. Lucidchart – best for diagrams in the conversation

Best for: Turning a discussion into a diagram without switching tabs

How it works: The Lucid MCP server (OAuth, admin-enabled) lets Slackbot search, summarize, create, and share documents.

The Lucid MCP server connects Slackbot to your Lucidchart library. Find a diagram by description, summarize it, generate a new flowchart or org chart from a prompt, then share it with teammates, all from the thread.

  • Search and summarize Lucidchart diagrams.
  • Generate new diagrams from a description or dataset.
  • Edit and share documents from the conversation.

Lucidchart pricing: Free → paid plans start at $9/month.

18. Lucidspark – best for brainstorms & whiteboards

Best for: Capturing ideas on a shared board from chat

How it works: Runs on the same Lucid MCP server as Lucidchart, covering your boards under one connection.

Lucidspark runs on the same Lucid MCP server, so Slackbot can find your boards, summarize a brainstorm, spin up a new board, and share it back into the channel, keeping ideation right next to the conversation.

  • Search and summarize Lucidspark boards.
  • Turn a discussion into a new board.
  • Share boards and previews into the channel.

Lucidspark pricing: Free → paid plans start at $9/month.

Coming soon to the registry

A few apps from the launch aren't live in the registry just yet, but they're on the way. Here's what to expect from each, based on what's documented so far.

19. Notion – best for searching docs & knowledge

Best for: Bringing your team wiki into the conversation

How it works: Notion's hosted MCP server uses OAuth for real-time read and write across pages and databases you can access.

Notion's hosted MCP server gives AI tools real-time read and write access to your workspace. From Slack you'll be able to search across pages and databases, draft new docs, and update project status, so the answer comes to the thread instead of you hunting for the page.

  • Search across pages and databases you can access.
  • Create docs (PRDs, specs, notes) and update task status.

Notion pricing: Free → paid plans start at $10/month.

20. PagerDuty – best for incidents & on-call

Best for: On-call engineers triaging in the channel

How it works: Read tools are on by default; write actions like creating incidents or overrides require write mode to be enabled.

PagerDuty's MCP server brings incident response into Slack. List active and past incidents, check who's on-call, and review escalation policies, then, with write actions enabled, create incidents, add notes and responders, or set a schedule override, right where the team is already coordinating.

  • Query incidents, services, schedules, and on-call status.
  • Create incidents and add notes or responders.
  • Manage escalations and schedule overrides.

PagerDuty pricing: Free → paid plans start at $25/month.

21. Adobe – best for on-brand creative content

Best for: Generating and sharing visuals without leaving Slack

How it works: Adobe Express runs as a Slack agent powered by Firefly; a paid Slack plan is needed for the agent and assistant view.

Adobe Express brings AI content creation into the conversation. Generate and edit images with Firefly, start from a library of templates and Adobe Stock assets, and stay on brand with shared brand kits, then drop the result into the thread for the team to react to.

  • Generate and edit images and templates with Firefly.
  • Pull from Adobe Stock assets, fonts, and templates.
  • Apply shared brand kits to keep work on-brand.

Adobe Express pricing: Free → paid plans start at $9.99/month.

22. Tableau Next – best for governed analytics on demand

Best for: Asking data questions against governed, semantic-layer analytics

How it works: Tableau Next's MCP server answers data questions grounded in the governed Tableau Semantics layer.

Tableau Next is Salesforce's agentic analytics platform. Its MCP server lets Slackbot ask questions against governed analytics, grounded in the Tableau Semantics layer, so you can ask a metric question and get a trustworthy answer with the right definitions behind it.

  • Ask metric and data questions in plain language.
  • Retrieve metric definitions and metadata.
  • Answers grounded in a governed semantic layer.

Tableau Next pricing: Paid plans start at $40/month.

Official vs. open-source vs. partner apps

The registry apps above are only one of three things people call a "Slack MCP server." The partner apps from the launch each host their own MCP server that Slackbot calls out to, the no-code path covered above. The other two run the opposite direction, letting an AI client reach into Slack: Slack's own hosted server at mcp.slack.com, or a self-hosted open-source one you run yourself.

If you want to…Use thisTrade-off
Get a tool to do work for you inside Slack, no setupPartner app (e.g., Reclaim)Scoped to what that app does
Connect Claude/Cursor/Perplexity to Slack the sanctioned wayOfficial Slack MCP serverLimited to approved partner clients
Self-host with maximum flexibility (DMs, stealth, GovSlack)Open-source serverYou own hosting and security
Roll out across a regulated org with governanceEnterprise MCP gatewayAdded cost and a management layer

How to set up the Slack MCP server

There are three routes. Connecting a registry app and the official server need no code. The open-source route gives you the most control.

Route 1: The official Slack MCP server

You'll need a workspace where an admin has approved the MCP integration. Then it's client-specific:

  • Claude Code: run /plugin install slack (or claude plugin install slack). It self-configures and prompts OAuth.
  • Claude Desktop: Settings → Customize → Connectors → add Slack → complete OAuth.
  • Cursor: use the "Add to Cursor" button, or Settings → MCP tab → add the remote config for https://mcp.slack.com/mcp, then click Connect.
  • Perplexity: add the Slack connector and authorize.

Every action runs on behalf of your own Slack account, so the AI only sees what you can see.

Route 2: An open-source server

  1. Create a Slack app at the Slack API dashboard.
  2. Add OAuth scopes for the tools you need (chat:write, channels:history, search:read.*, canvases:read/write).
  3. Choose your token type. A bot token (xoxb) cannot search messages. Search needs a user token (xoxp) with search scopes.
  4. Install the app to your workspace and copy the token.
  5. Add the server to your client config (Cursor mcp.json or Claude Desktop):
{
  "mcpServers": {
    "slack": {
      "command": "npx",
      "args": ["-y", "@modelcontextprotocol/server-slack"],
      "env": {
        "SLACK_BOT_TOKEN": "xoxb-your-token",
        "SLACK_TEAM_ID": "T0123456789"
      }
    }
  }
}

Then invite the bot to channels. A bot can't read or post in a channel it hasn't been added to, even with broad scopes.

Route 3: Connect a registry app to Slackbot

The path for the partner integrations above, and the simplest of all:

  1. Open the MCP registry in the Slack Marketplace and find the app you want.
  2. Connect and authorize with your account; an admin approves it where required.
  3. Just ask Slackbot in plain language. It routes the request to the right app and renders the result in the thread.

To connect Reclaim, for example, find it in the registry, authorize, and start asking it to manage your schedule.

What you can do with Reclaim in Slack

Scheduling is the job Reclaim is built for, and connecting it to Slackbot puts that assistant where your team already talks. Connect Reclaim from the registry once, then ask in plain language and it works against your real calendar, with a preview step before anything changes.

  • Find time across calendars: ask Reclaim to find Focus Time with two teammates this week, and it proposes slots you confirm before they book.
  • Reschedule without the back-and-forth: when a meeting conflicts, ask Reclaim to move it and it works around your existing priorities.
  • Defend deep work: tell Reclaim to protect a couple of hours for heads-down time tomorrow, and it guards that block on your calendar.
  • Check your week: ask what's coming up or where last week went, and the answer lands in the thread instead of sending you to your calendar.
  • Turn a decision into a task: when a thread settles on a next step, hand it to Reclaim and it schedules the work around everything else.

Every change runs through Reclaim's preview first, so you approve it before it touches your calendar. It's the same assistant you'd use in the Reclaim app, now available right where the conversation happens.

Frequently asked questions

It's a secure bridge that lets an AI assistant connect to your Slack workspace to search, read, and send messages, manage canvases, and take other actions through natural language, using the open Model Context Protocol.
Yes. Slack hosts an official remote MCP server at mcp.slack.com. Approved AI clients connect to it through OAuth, and workspace admins approve and manage those connections.
The official server itself is free to use; access follows your Slack plan, and some capabilities, like canvases, require a paid Slack plan. Open-source servers are free to run, but you cover your own hosting.
It depends on the job. To give an AI assistant Slack context, the official server is the right default and power self-hosters often choose korotovsky. To have an app do work for you in Slack, connect a registry app such as Reclaim, Linear, or Zoom. There's no single best, only the best for your situation.
The launch lineup of 20+ apps spans five categories: product and development (Linear, Atlassian Rovo, MuleSoft, Replit, Vercel, PagerDuty), document and content (Gamma, Webflow, Notion), creative and design (Canva, Figma, Miro, Adobe), business operations and agreements (Reclaim.ai, Brex, HiBob, Ironclad, Zoom), and visual collaboration and analytics (Amplitude, Lucidchart, Lucidspark, Tableau Next). A few are rolling out as coming soon, with more on the way.
The official server is hosted by Slack, admin-approved, and limited to supported clients. Open-source servers run on your own infrastructure, give you more flexibility such as stealth mode, DMs, and GovSlack, and put hosting and security in your hands.
For the official path, add the Slack connector in the client and authorize through OAuth. For an open-source server, create a Slack app, add OAuth scopes, install it, and add the server to your client's config file like Cursor's mcp.json, then invite the bot to the channels it needs.
Searching messages requires a user token (xoxp) with search scopes. A standard bot token (xoxb) doesn't have message-search permission, which surprises a lot of first-time builders.
Today the official server works with Claude, Claude Code, Cursor, and Perplexity, with more partners on the way.
Yes. Through the MCP registry in the Slack Marketplace you can connect partner apps like Reclaim, then ask in plain language to find time, reschedule, or protect Focus Time, with human-in-the-loop review before any calendar change.

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