Twitter MCP Server
Enables seamless interaction with Twitter/X platform through Claude AI, allowing users to post tweets with images, search for tweets, and engage in conversations using natural language commands.
README
Twitter MCP Server
A Model Context Protocol (MCP) server that enables seamless interaction with Twitter/X platform. Post tweets, share images, and search Twitter directly through Claude AI.
Features
- š¦ Post Tweets - Share your thoughts with the world
- š¼ļø Image Support - Post tweets with images (JPG, PNG, GIF, WEBP)
- š Search Tweets - Find and analyze tweets by query
- š¬ Reply to Tweets - Engage in conversations
- š Secure Authentication - OAuth 1.0a authentication
- ā” Rate Limiting - Built-in protection against API limits
Table of Contents
-
Development
Types:
interface SearchTweetsRequest { query: string; // Search query string count: number; // Number of results (10-100) } interface SearchResponse { tweets: Tweet[]; meta: { result_count: number; next_token?: string; }; }
Installation
Prerequisites
- Node.js 18 or higher
- npm or npx
- Twitter Developer Account with API credentials
- Claude Desktop App
Quick Start
The easiest way to use this MCP server is through npx (no installation required):
{
"mcpServers": {
"twitter": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "@muhammadsiddiq/twitter-mcp"],
"env": {
"API_KEY": "your_api_key",
"API_SECRET_KEY": "your_api_secret_key",
"ACCESS_TOKEN": "your_access_token",
"ACCESS_TOKEN_SECRET": "your_access_token_secret"
}
}
}
}
Configuration
Step 1: Get Twitter API Credentials
- Visit Twitter Developer Portal
- Create a new App or use an existing one
- Navigate to "Keys and Tokens"
- Generate/Copy the following:
- API Key
- API Secret Key
- Access Token
- Access Token Secret
Step 2: Configure Claude Desktop
Windows
Edit the configuration file located at:
%APPDATA%\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json
Or navigate to:
C:\Users\YOUR_USERNAME\AppData\Roaming\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json
macOS
Edit the configuration file located at:
~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
Linux
Edit the configuration file located at:
~/.config/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
Step 3: Add MCP Server Configuration
Add the following to your claude_desktop_config.json:
{
"mcpServers": {
"twitter": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "@muhammadsiddiq/twitter-mcp"],
"env": {
"API_KEY": "your_api_key",
"API_SECRET_KEY": "your_api_secret_key",
"ACCESS_TOKEN": "your_access_token",
"ACCESS_TOKEN_SECRET": "your_access_token_secret"
}
}
}
}
For security, consider using environment variables in production:
{
"mcpServers": {
"twitter": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["-y", "@muhammadsiddiq/twitter-mcp"],
"env": {
"API_KEY": "${TWITTER_API_KEY}",
"API_SECRET_KEY": "${TWITTER_API_SECRET_KEY}",
"ACCESS_TOKEN": "${TWITTER_ACCESS_TOKEN}",
"ACCESS_TOKEN_SECRET": "${TWITTER_ACCESS_TOKEN_SECRET}"
}
}
}
}
Important: Replace the placeholder values with your actual Twitter API credentials.
Step 4: Restart Claude Desktop
Close and reopen Claude Desktop completely for the changes to take effect.
Setting Up Filesystem Access in Claude Desktop
Claude Desktop needs permission to access files and folders on your computer. Follow these simple steps to grant access:
Step-by-Step Instructions
-
Open Claude Desktop Settings
- Click on your profile icon or the settings gear in Claude Desktop
- Navigate to Settings
-
Go to Connectors
- In the Settings menu, find and click on Connectors
-
Enable Filesystem Access
- Click on Browse Connectors
- Select Desktop Extensions
- Find and click on Filesystem
-
Add Directory Path
- Enter the full path to the directory you want Claude to access
- Examples:
- Windows:
C:\Users\YourName\TwitterImages - macOS:
/Users/yourname/TwitterImages - Linux:
/home/yourname/TwitterImages
- Windows:
š” Tip: You can add multiple directories by repeating this step
-
Save and Restart
- Click Save or Apply
- Close Claude Desktop completely
- Reopen Claude Desktop for changes to take effect
Verification
To verify filesystem access is working:
- Ask Claude: "List files in the directory I gave you access to"
- Or provide a specific path: "Show me files in
C:\Users\YourName\TwitterImages"
If Claude can see your files, you're all set! š
Common Paths to Consider
-
For Twitter images: Create a dedicated folder like:
C:\TwitterImages(Windows)~/TwitterImages(macOS/Linux)
-
For documents:
C:\Users\YourName\Documents(Windows)~/Documents(macOS/Linux)
Troubleshooting
Can't find Connectors in Settings?
- Make sure you're using the latest version of Claude Desktop
- Try restarting the application
Path not working?
- Use the full absolute path (complete path from root)
- Avoid spaces in folder names, or use quotes around the path
- Check that the directory actually exists on your computer
Changes not taking effect?
- Make sure you completely closed Claude Desktop (check system tray/menu bar)
- Wait a few seconds before reopening
- Restart your computer if issues persist
Usage
Once configured, you can interact with Twitter through natural language commands to Claude.
Posting Tweets
Simple Tweet:
Post a tweet: "Hello World! š"
Posting with Images
Important: Make sure you have configured the filesystem MCP server as shown in Step 4.
Tweet with Image:
Post this image with caption: "Check out this amazing view!"
take image from desktop
Working with Images:
- File Access:
- The filesystem MCP server must be configured to access local images
- Images must be in an accessible location on your computer
- Both absolute and relative paths are supported
- Path Formats:
- Windows:
C:\Users\YourName\Pictures\image.jpg - macOS:
/Users/YourName/Pictures/image.jpg - Linux:
/home/yourname/pictures/image.jpg - Relative:
./images/photo.jpg(relative to your working directory)
- Supported Image Formats:
- JPEG/JPG (
image/jpeg) - PNG (
image/png) - GIF (
image/gif) - WEBP (
image/webp)
- Image Requirements:
- Maximum file size: 5MB for static images, 15MB for GIFs
- Recommended dimensions: 1200x675 pixels (16:9 aspect ratio)
- File permissions: Must be readable by the Claude Desktop app
- Best Practices:
- Use relative paths when possible for portability
- Keep images in a dedicated folder for better organization
- Consider image optimization for better upload performance
- Test with small images first
Searching Tweets
Basic Search:
Search for tweets about "artificial intelligence"
Advanced Search:
Search for 50 tweets about "climate change" from the past week
API Reference
Tools
The server provides three tools that can be accessed through Claude:
1. post_tweet
Post a text-only tweet.
2. post_tweet_with_image
Post a tweet with an attached image.
Supported Image Formats:
- JPEG/JPG
- PNG
- GIF (animated, max 15MB)
- WEBP
3. search_tweets
Search for tweets matching a query.
Types:
interface SearchTweetsRequest {
query: string; // Search query string
count: number; // Number of results (10-100)
}
interface SearchResponse {
tweets: Tweet[];
meta: {
result_count: number;
next_token?: string;
};
}
Example:
// Request:
{
"query": "machine learning",
"count": 25
}
// Response:
{
"status": "success",
"message": "Search completed successfully",
"data": {
"tweets": [
{
"id": "1234567891",
"text": "Exploring machine learning concepts...",
"author_id": "user123",
"created_at": "2025-11-06T12:00:00.000Z"
}
// ... more tweets
],
"meta": {
"result_count": 25,
"next_token": "abc123xyz"
}
}
}
Development
Local Development Setup
- Clone the repository:
git clone https://github.com/genaiwithms/twitter-mcp.git
cd twitter-mcp
- Install dependencies:
npm install
- Build the project:
npm run build
- Set up environment:
Create a .env file in the project root:
API_KEY=your_api_key
API_SECRET_KEY=your_api_secret
ACCESS_TOKEN=your_access_token
ACCESS_TOKEN_SECRET=your_access_token_secret
- Run locally:
Update your Claude config to use local build:
{
"mcpServers": {
"twitter": {
"command": "node",
"args": ["${absolute_path_to_project}/build/index.js"],
"envFile": ".env"
}
}
}
- Development commands:
# Start the server
npm start
# Run tests
npm test
# Build for production
npm run build
# Publish to npm (maintainers only)
npm publish --access public
Project Structure
twitter-mcp/
āāā src/
ā āāā index.ts # Main server entry point
ā āāā twitter-api.ts # Twitter API client
ā āāā types.ts # TypeScript type definitions
ā āāā formatter.ts # Response formatting
ā āāā types/ # Type declarations
ā ā āāā modelcontextprotocol.d.ts
ā āāā evals/
ā āāā evals.ts # Test utilities
āāā .github/ # GitHub Actions workflows
ā āāā workflows/
ā āāā ci.yml # CI pipeline
āāā build/ # Compiled JavaScript (generated)
āāā package.json # Project metadata and dependencies
āāā tsconfig.json # TypeScript configuration
āāā .gitignore # Git ignore rules
āāā .env.example # Example environment variables
āāā CHANGELOG.md # Version history
āāā CONTRIBUTING.md # Contribution guidelines
āāā README.md # Project documentation
Scripts
npm run build- Compile TypeScript to JavaScriptnpm start- Run the compiled servernpm run prepublishOnly- Build before publishing
Troubleshooting
Common Issues
1. Authentication Errors
Problem: "401 Unauthorized" or authentication failed
Solutions:
- Verify Twitter API credentials in Developer Portal
- Ensure all four tokens are correct and complete
- Check app permissions (needs Read + Write)
- Try regenerating access tokens
- Verify
.envfile format if using local development
2. Rate Limits
Problem: "Rate limit exceeded" or requests failing
Solutions:
- Built-in rate limiting protects against overuse
- Wait 15 minutes for limits to reset
- Check your Twitter API tier limits
- Use exponential backoff for retries
- Monitor usage in Twitter Developer Portal
3. Image Upload Issues
Problem: Image upload fails or missing media
Solutions:
- Verify file exists and is readable
- Check size limits: 5MB (images), 15MB (GIFs)
- Ensure format is supported (JPG, PNG, GIF, WEBP)
- Use absolute file paths
- Check file permissions
- Verify image is not corrupted
3. "Image Upload Failed"
Problem: Image file cannot be uploaded.
Solutions:
- Verify the file path is correct and absolute
- Check file exists and is readable
- Ensure file size is under limits (5MB for images, 15MB for GIFs)
- Verify file format is supported (JPG, PNG, GIF, WEBP)
- Check file permissions
4. "Module Not Found" Error
Problem: Dependencies not installed or build not completed.
Solution:
# Remove old dependencies
rm -rf node_modules package-lock.json
# Reinstall
npm install
# Rebuild
npm run build
5. Server Not Responding in Claude
Problem: MCP server not connecting to Claude.
Solutions:
- Restart Claude Desktop completely
- Check config file syntax is valid JSON
- Verify file path in config matches actual location
- Check Node.js is installed:
node --version - Look for errors in Claude's logs
Debug Mode
To see detailed logs, check:
Windows:
%APPDATA%\Claude\logs\
macOS:
~/Library/Logs/Claude/
Linux:
~/.config/Claude/logs/
Environment Variables
The server requires the following environment variables:
| Variable | Description | Required |
|---|---|---|
API_KEY |
Twitter API Key | Yes |
API_SECRET_KEY |
Twitter API Secret Key | Yes |
ACCESS_TOKEN |
Twitter Access Token | Yes |
ACCESS_TOKEN_SECRET |
Twitter Access Token Secret | Yes |
Security Best Practices
- Never commit credentials to version control
- Use environment variables for sensitive data
- Rotate credentials periodically
- Monitor API usage in Twitter Developer Portal
- Set up alerts for unusual activity
- Use separate credentials for development and production
Limitations
- Maximum tweet length: 280 characters
- Image file size limits: 5MB (images), 15MB (GIFs)
- Rate limits apply based on your Twitter API tier
- Media must be uploaded before tweeting (handled automatically)
Testing
This project uses Jest for testing. Run tests with:
# Run all tests
npm test
# Run tests in watch mode
npm test -- --watch
# Run tests with coverage
npm test -- --coverage
Writing Tests
Test files are located in src/evals/. Example test:
Contributing
Contributions are welcome! Please follow these steps:
-
Fork & Clone:
git clone https://github.com/EnesCinr/twitter-mcp.git cd twitter-mcp -
Create Branch:
git checkout -b feature/your-feature # or git checkout -b fix/your-bugfix -
Make Changes:
- Follow TypeScript practices
- Add/update tests
- Update documentation
-
Test & Build:
npm install npm test npm run build -
Commit & Push:
git add . git commit -m "feat: add amazing feature" git push origin feature/your-feature -
Open Pull Request:
- Use clear title and description
- Reference issues if applicable
- Include test results
- Update documentation
Commit Messages
Follow Conventional Commits:
feat:New featurefix:Bug fixdocs:Documentationtest:Testsrefactor:Code refactoringchore:Maintenance
License
This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details.
Support
- Issues: GitHub Issues
- Documentation: MCP Documentation
- Twitter API: Twitter Developer Docs
Acknowledgments
- Built with Model Context Protocol SDK
- Uses twitter-api-v2 library
- Inspired by the Claude AI ecosystem
Made with ā¤ļø by genaiwithms
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.
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.
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.
VeyraX MCP
Single MCP tool to connect all your favorite tools: Gmail, Calendar and 40 more.
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.
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.
Qdrant Server
This repository is an example of how to create a MCP server for Qdrant, a vector search engine.
E2B
Using MCP to run code via e2b.
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.
Neon Database
MCP server for interacting with Neon Management API and databases