@getplexa/mcp
A Model Context Protocol server that gives any MCP client two economic-safety tools: realizable quote and pretrade check, paid per call in USDC with no accounts.
README
@getplexa/mcp — Plexa MCP server
A Model Context Protocol server that gives any MCP client (Claude Desktop, Cursor, your own agent) two economic-safety tools from Plexa — the x402-native economic-safety layer for trading agents — paid per call in USDC, no accounts:
| Tool | Wraps | Price | Returns |
|---|---|---|---|
plexa_quote |
POST /v1/quote |
$0.02 | Executable fill price under size (not mid/spot), price impact (bps), realizable depth, per-leg route, worst-case slippage, confidence — from canonical on-chain quoters on Base, Polygon & Arbitrum. |
plexa_pretrade_check |
POST /v1/pretrade/check |
$0.05 | Economic-safety verdict ok / caution / avoid + reasons + confidence, plus an executable quote. (Base-only today.) |
It is a thin client of the public API (https://api.getplexa.com) — it pays a 402 automatically,
signs the USDC authorization locally with your wallet, and never sees your key. The liquidity engine
stays behind the API.
Why
A generic wallet guard answers "can I sign this transaction?". It can't answer the economic question an automated trader actually needs: what price will this swap really fill at under my size, and is this token a trap (rug / honeypot / thin liquidity)? Plexa answers both. This package puts those answers one tool-call away inside any MCP-speaking agent.
Install
Nothing to install — point your MCP client at the package via npx. It is fetched and run on demand.
Claude Desktop
Add to claude_desktop_config.json (Settings → Developer → Edit Config):
{
"mcpServers": {
"plexa": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "@getplexa/mcp"],
"env": {
"PLEXA_BASE_URL": "https://api.getplexa.com",
"AGENT_WALLET_KEY": "0x<your funded wallet private key>",
"CHAIN": "base"
}
}
}
}
Cursor
Add to ~/.cursor/mcp.json (or Settings → MCP → Add) — the same mcpServers block as above.
Restart the client. You should see the plexa_quote and plexa_pretrade_check tools available.
Configuration
All configuration is via environment variables (set in the env block of your MCP config):
| Variable | Default | Notes |
|---|---|---|
PLEXA_BASE_URL |
https://api.getplexa.com |
The public API. The real URL — not a secret. |
AGENT_WALLET_KEY |
(none) | Required to pay. Funded wallet private key — pays per call and signs locally. Plexa never receives it. Without it, tools return a clear 402. |
CHAIN |
base |
base | polygon | arbitrum. The chain your wallet is funded on; quotes and payment default to it. plexa_pretrade_check is Base-only today. |
Funding. Use a dedicated, low-balance wallet with a little USDC on CHAIN to pay per call
(quotes $0.02, checks $0.05). The wallet signs an EIP-3009 USDC authorization per request; Plexa returns
the result only after the payment settles on-chain (settle-before-serve).
Your key is a secret. Prefer your MCP client's secret storage if it has one. Never commit it.
How payment works (x402 in MCP)
MCP has no native payment. This server acts as an x402 client: it wraps fetch, so when Plexa
replies 402 Payment Required it reads the payment requirements, signs a USDC authorization with your
wallet (locally), and retries. The signed authorization is the only thing that leaves your machine —
never the key. Payment is made on CHAIN, so you fund one wallet on one chain.
If no AGENT_WALLET_KEY is set, the tools return an honest 402 error explaining a funded wallet is
needed — they never fabricate a result.
Example
Once configured, just ask your agent naturally — it will call the tools:
"Before I buy this token
0x…on Base, check it with Plexa and get me an executable quote for $500."
The agent calls plexa_pretrade_check (verdict + reasons) and plexa_quote (executable price under
$500), pays $0.05 + $0.02 in USDC automatically, and answers with real on-chain economics.
Notes
- Client-only. Talks to the public Plexa API over HTTPS. No service internals ship in this package.
- Honest failures. A non-2xx response or a network error becomes a loud tool error — never a clean-looking empty result. An agent can always tell a failure from a pass.
- Built on the official
@modelcontextprotocol/sdk+ x402.
License
MIT — see LICENSE.
Questions: support@getplexa.com · getplexa.com
Informational on-chain data and heuristic economic signals, not financial advice. Absence of flags is not a guarantee of safety. Verify independently before trading.
Recommended Servers
playwright-mcp
A Model Context Protocol server that enables LLMs to interact with web pages through structured accessibility snapshots without requiring vision models or screenshots.
Magic Component Platform (MCP)
An AI-powered tool that generates modern UI components from natural language descriptions, integrating with popular IDEs to streamline UI development workflow.
Audiense Insights MCP Server
Enables interaction with Audiense Insights accounts via the Model Context Protocol, facilitating the extraction and analysis of marketing insights and audience data including demographics, behavior, and influencer engagement.
VeyraX MCP
Single MCP tool to connect all your favorite tools: Gmail, Calendar and 40 more.
graphlit-mcp-server
The Model Context Protocol (MCP) Server enables integration between MCP clients and the Graphlit service. Ingest anything from Slack to Gmail to podcast feeds, in addition to web crawling, into a Graphlit project - and then retrieve relevant contents from the MCP client.
Kagi MCP Server
An MCP server that integrates Kagi search capabilities with Claude AI, enabling Claude to perform real-time web searches when answering questions that require up-to-date information.
E2B
Using MCP to run code via e2b.
Neon Database
MCP server for interacting with Neon Management API and databases
Exa Search
A Model Context Protocol (MCP) server lets AI assistants like Claude use the Exa AI Search API for web searches. This setup allows AI models to get real-time web information in a safe and controlled way.
Qdrant Server
This repository is an example of how to create a MCP server for Qdrant, a vector search engine.