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    Moralis Mcp Server

    12 stars
    TypeScript
    Updated Oct 8, 2025

    Table of Contents

    • 🧠 Overview
    • ⚙️ Common Use Cases
    • 🔐 Getting an API Key
    • 🚀 Usage with a Client
    • Installing via Smithery
    • 🖥️ Using as a Server
    • Examples
    • Notes
    • 🛠 Development
    • 🐞 Debugging
    • 💬 Example Prompts
    • 📚 API Reference

    Table of Contents

    • 🧠 Overview
    • ⚙️ Common Use Cases
    • 🔐 Getting an API Key
    • 🚀 Usage with a Client
    • Installing via Smithery
    • 🖥️ Using as a Server
    • Examples
    • Notes
    • 🛠 Development
    • 🐞 Debugging
    • 💬 Example Prompts
    • 📚 API Reference

    Documentation

    smithery badge

    🧠 Overview

    The Moralis MCP Server is a local or cloud-deployable engine that connects natural language prompts to real blockchain insights — allowing AI models to query wallet activity, token metrics, dapp usage, and more without custom code or SQL.

    Built on top of the Model Context Protocol, this server makes it easy for LLMs to talk to Moralis APIs in a consistent, explainable, and extensible way.

    • 🔗 Fully pluggable: swap LLMs, customize retrieval logic, or extend with your own tools
    • 🧱 Works with OpenAI, Claude, and open-source models
    • 🧠 Powers agents, devtools, bots, dashboards, and beyond

    ⚙️ Common Use Cases

    • 🤖 AI agents & assistants: “What’s this wallet’s trading history?”
    • 📈 Devtools: on-chain QA, testing, CLI integrations
    • 📊 Dashboards: natural language to charts/data
    • 📉 Monitoring: alerting & summarization for tokens/dapps
    • 🧠 Trading bots: LLM-driven strategies with real blockchain grounding

    🔐 Getting an API Key

    To use this MCP server with Moralis APIs, you'll need an API key:

    1. Go to Moralis developer portal

    2. Sign up and log in

    3. Navigate to your API Keys page from the main menu

    4. Copy your key and configure it in your config file (see next section), or set it in your environment:

    bash
    export MORALIS_API_KEY=

    ⚠️ Note: Some features and endpoints require a Moralis paid plan. For full access and production-grade performance, we recommend signing up for a paid tier.

    🚀 Usage with a Client

    To connect the MCP server to a compatible client (e.g. Claude Desktop, OpenAI-compatible agents, VS Code extensions, etc.), configure the client to launch the server as a subprocess.

    Most clients support a simple config file - for example, you might create a file like mcp.json in the client’s configuration directory with the following:

    json
    {
      "mcpServers": {
        "serverName": {
          "command": "npx @moralisweb3/api-mcp-server",
          "args": [],
          "env": {
            "MORALIS_API_KEY": ""
          }
        }
      }
    }

    This setup can be adapted for any client that supports MCP servers. Replace the example values with those specific to your use case.

    Installing via Smithery

    To install Moralis API Server for Claude Desktop automatically via Smithery:

    bash
    npx -y @smithery/cli install @MoralisWeb3/moralis-mcp-server --client claude

    🖥️ Using as a Server

    The server accepts an optional --transport argument to specify the transport type. The available transport types are:

    • stdio: Communicates over standard input/output (default).
    • web: Starts a HTTP server for communication.
    • streamable-http: Starts an HTTP server with streamable endpoints.

    Examples

    1. **Using the default stdio transport**:

    bash
    moralis-api-mcp --transport stdio

    2. **Using the web transport**:

    bash
    moralis-api-mcp --transport web

    This will start a HTTP server. You can send requests to the server using tools like curl or Postman.

    3. **Using the streamable-http transport**:

    bash
    moralis-api-mcp --transport streamable-http

    This will start an HTTP server. You can send requests to the server using tools like curl or Postman.

    Notes

    • Ensure that the required environment variables (e.g., MORALIS_API_KEY) are set before starting the server.
    • For custom configurations, you can pass additional arguments or environment variables as needed.
    • Refer to the documentation for more details on each transport type.

    🛠 Development

    Install dependencies:

    bash
    npm install

    Build the server:

    bash
    npm run build

    For development with auto-rebuild:

    bash
    npm run watch

    🐞 Debugging

    Since MCP servers communicate over stdio, debugging can be challenging. We recommend using the MCP Inspector, which is available as a package script:

    bash
    npm run inspector

    The Inspector will provide a URL to access debugging tools in your browser.

    💬 Example Prompts

    Here are some example prompts you can use with your AI agent through the MCP server:

    code
    - What’s the current price of PEPE and Ethereum?
    
    - What is the current trading sentiment for TOSHI on Base — bullish or bearish?
    
    - Show me the NFTs owned by `vitalik.eth` on Base.
    
    - What tokens does wallet `0xab71...4321` hold?
    
    - When was wallet 0xabc...123 first and last seen active on Ethereum, Base, and Polygon?
    
    - Show me the complete transaction history for 0xabc...123 across Ethereum, Base, and BNB Chain.
    
    - What is the current net worth in USD of wallet 0xabc...123?
    
    - Find wallet addresses that are likely associated with Coinbase.
    
    - Analyze the current holder distribution of SPX6900 — include whales, small holders, and recent growth trends.
    
    - Show me PEPE’s daily OHLC data for the past 30 days and provide a summary of the trend — is it bullish or bearish?

    These prompts are parsed and mapped to structured Moralis API calls using the MCP method registry.

    💡 You can also build custom prompts based on any supported method.

    📚 API Reference

    The Moralis MCP Server wraps and translates prompts into Moralis REST API calls. You can explore the underlying API surface here:

    🔗 **Moralis Swagger Docs (v2.2)**

    This documentation covers endpoints for:

    • Token pricing
    • Wallet activity
    • NFT metadata and ownership
    • Transfers and transactions
    • And more

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