gtm-mcp-server
Health Gecti
- License — License: BSD-3-Clause
- Description — Repository has a description
- Active repo — Last push 0 days ago
- Community trust — 65 GitHub stars
Code Gecti
- Code scan — Scanned 3 files during light audit, no dangerous patterns found
Permissions Gecti
- Permissions — No dangerous permissions requested
This tool is a Model Context Protocol (MCP) server that allows Large Language Models (LLMs) to manage and configure Google Tag Manager (GTM) containers using natural language commands.
Security Assessment
Overall Risk: Medium
This server requires OAuth 2.1 authentication and communicates entirely over Streamable HTTP to the external URL `mcp.gtmeditor.com`. The code scan did not find any hardcoded secrets, dangerous permissions, or malicious code execution patterns. However, the tool inherently manages highly sensitive web infrastructure. It possesses the capability to create, modify, and potentially publish tags and tracking configurations on your behalf. If compromised or misconfigured, it could easily introduce malicious tracking scripts or break your website's analytics.
Quality Assessment
The project demonstrates strong community trust for a niche tool, currently backed by 65 GitHub stars. It is highly maintained, with its most recent push occurring today. The repository includes a comprehensive README detailing its architecture, supported clients, and safety features. Furthermore, it uses the permissive and standard BSD-3-Clause license, making it highly accessible for integration and modification.
Verdict
Use with caution — while the code itself is safe and well-maintained, the tool requests access to critical web infrastructure, so you should strictly limit its permissions and carefully review any AI-proposed changes before publishing.
An MCP server for Google Tag Manager. Connect it to your LLM, authenticate once, and start managing GTM through natural language.
GTM MCP Server
Let AI manage your Google Tag Manager containers.
Create tags, audit configurations, generate tracking plans, and publish changes, all through natural conversation with Claude, ChatGPT, Gemini, Cursor, and more.
URL: https://mcp.gtmeditor.com
Table of Contents
- Supported AI Clients
- What Can You Do?
- Quick Start
- Features
- Use Cases
- How It Works
- Safety Features
- Self-Hosting
- Available Tools
- Resources & Prompts
- Better AI Context
- Architecture
- Known Issues
- Links
- Author
- License
Supported AI Clients
| Client | Transport | Auth Flow | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Claude (Web & Desktop) | Streamable HTTP | OAuth 2.1 + PKCE | Supported |
| Claude Code (CLI) | Streamable HTTP | OAuth 2.1 + PKCE | Supported |
| ChatGPT | Streamable HTTP | OAuth 2.1 + PKCE | Supported |
| Gemini CLI | Streamable HTTP | OAuth 2.1 + PKCE (DCR) | Supported |
| Cursor | Streamable HTTP | OAuth 2.1 + PKCE | Supported |
The server is client-agnostic — any MCP client that supports OAuth 2.1 with PKCE over HTTP transport should work out of the box, including clients that use Dynamic Client Registration (RFC 7591) and those that don't.
What Can You Do?
Ask your AI assistant to:
- "List all my GTM containers"
- "Create a GA4 event tag for form submissions"
- "Audit this container for issues and duplicates"
- "Generate a tracking plan document for the marketing team"
- "Set up ecommerce tracking for purchases"
- "Publish the changes we just made"
No more clicking through the GTM interface. No more copy-pasting configurations. Just describe what you need.
Quick Start
Claude (Web & Desktop)
Claude.ai:
- Go to Settings → Connectors → Add Custom Connector
- Enter:
https://mcp.gtmeditor.com - Click Add and sign in with Google
Claude Code (CLI):
claude mcp add -t http gtm https://mcp.gtmeditor.com
ChatGPT
- Go to OpenAI Apps Platform
- Add an MCP integration with URL:
https://mcp.gtmeditor.com - Authorize with your Google account
Gemini CLI
gemini mcp add --transport http --url https://mcp.gtmeditor.com gtm
Cursor
- Open Settings > MCP
- Click Add new MCP server
- Set type to URL and enter:
https://mcp.gtmeditor.com/authorize - Authorize with your Google account
Or add to your .cursor/mcp.json:
{
"mcpServers": {
"gtm": {
"url": "https://mcp.gtmeditor.com/authorize"
}
}
}
Features
Tag Management
Create and modify any GTM tag type:
- GA4 Configuration & Events — Set up Google Analytics 4 with proper measurement IDs
- Ecommerce Tracking — Purchase, add-to-cart, view-item events
- Custom HTML — Inject scripts, pixels, and custom code
- Custom Image — Tracking pixels with cache busting
Trigger Management
Build triggers for any scenario:
- Page views (all pages or specific URLs)
- Custom dataLayer events
- Click tracking
- Form submissions
- Timer-based triggers
- Trigger groups for complex conditions
Container Operations
- Browse accounts, containers, and workspaces
- Create versions from workspace changes
- Publish versions to go live
- Organize with folders
- Enable/disable built-in variables
Server-Side Containers
Full support for server-side GTM containers:
- Clients — Create, update, and delete server-side clients (e.g. GA4 client)
- Transformations — Control event parameters with allow, exclude, and augment rules
Community Template Gallery
Import templates from Google's Community Template Gallery:
- "Import the iubenda cookie consent template"
- "Add Cookiebot to my container"
- "Set up Facebook Pixel using the gallery template"
The AI will search for the template, find the GitHub repository, and import it automatically.
AI-Powered Workflows
Container Audit
"Audit my container for issues" — Analyzes your workspace for:
- Naming inconsistencies
- Duplicate tags
- Orphaned triggers
- Security concerns
- Best practice violations
Tracking Plan Generation
"Generate a tracking plan" — Creates markdown documentation of:
- All events and their triggers
- Data layer requirements
- Variable definitions
- Implementation notes
GA4 Setup Recommendations
"Help me set up GA4 for ecommerce" — Recommends:
- Which tags to create
- Trigger configurations
- Required variables
- Data layer implementation code
Use Cases
Build Complete Tracking Setups
Ask AI to create a full GA4 ecommerce implementation from scratch:
- "Set up GA4 ecommerce tracking for my store"
- Creates 12+ tags (configuration + all ecommerce events)
- Creates matching triggers for each dataLayer event
- Creates data layer variables for items, currency, value, transaction_id
- Follows Google's recommended event naming and parameters
Implement Consent Management
Integrate privacy tools like OneTrust with your tracking:
- "Make GA4 fire only when analytics consent is granted"
- Creates consent-checking variables
- Sets up conditional triggers
- Updates existing tags to respect user choices
Bulk Operations & Renaming
Manage containers at scale:
- "Add 'ecom -' prefix to all ecommerce triggers"
- "Update all tags to use a measurement ID variable"
- Rename, update, or organize dozens of items through conversation
Custom Variables & Logic
Create sophisticated tracking logic:
- "Create a variable that returns the local timestamp"
- "Add a custom parameter to the purchase tag"
- Custom JavaScript variables, data layer mappings, and more
For Agencies
- Manage multiple client containers (7+ accounts shown in demo)
- Standardize implementations across clients
- Rapid setup for new projects
- Version and publish changes safely
How It Works
The GTM MCP Server connects AI assistants to the Google Tag Manager API using the Model Context Protocol. When you ask Claude or ChatGPT to manage your GTM, it:
- Authenticates with your Google account (OAuth 2.1)
- Reads your container configurations
- Executes the changes you request
- Confirms before destructive operations
Your credentials are never stored—the server uses token-based authentication that you can revoke anytime from your Google account.
Safety Features
- Confirmation required for deletions and publishing
- Workspace-only changes — nothing goes live until you publish
- Version control — all changes create a version first
- Audit logging — track what was changed
Self-Hosting
Want to run your own instance?
Docker Setup
git clone https://github.com/paolobietolini/gtm-mcp-server.git
cd gtm-mcp-server
# Create .env file
cat > .env << 'EOF'
GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID=your-client-id.apps.googleusercontent.com
GOOGLE_CLIENT_SECRET=your-client-secret
JWT_SECRET=$(openssl rand -base64 32)
BASE_URL=http://localhost:8080
EOF
# Start the server
docker compose up -d
# Add to Claude
claude mcp add -t http gtm http://localhost:8080
Docker-to-Docker
If another container needs to reach the MCP server via an internal Docker network alias, add ALLOWED_HOSTS to your .env:
ALLOWED_HOSTS=gtm-mcp:8080
This enables dynamic URL resolution for trusted internal hostnames while keeping the server secure against host header injection.
Google Cloud Setup
- Go to Google Cloud Console
- Enable the Tag Manager API
- Create OAuth 2.0 credentials (Web application)
- Add redirect URIs:
https://claude.ai/api/mcp/auth_callback https://claude.com/api/mcp/auth_callback https://chatgpt.com/connector_platform_oauth_redirect https://your-domain.com/oauth/callback
Available Tools
Read Operations
| Tool | Description |
|---|---|
list_accounts |
List all GTM accounts |
list_containers |
List containers in an account |
list_workspaces |
List workspaces in a container |
list_tags |
List all tags in a workspace |
get_tag |
Get tag details by ID |
list_triggers |
List all triggers |
get_trigger |
Get trigger details by ID |
list_variables |
List all variables |
get_variable |
Get variable details by ID |
list_folders |
List folders in a workspace |
get_folder_entities |
Get tags/triggers/variables in a folder |
list_built_in_variables |
List enabled built-in variables in a workspace |
Utility
| Tool | Description |
|---|---|
ping |
Test server connectivity |
auth_status |
Check authentication status |
Write Operations
| Tool | Description |
|---|---|
update_account |
Rename a GTM account |
create_container |
Create a new container in an account |
update_container |
Rename a container (preserves usage context, domain, notes) |
delete_container |
Remove a container (requires confirmation) |
create_workspace |
Create a new workspace in a container |
create_tag |
Create a new tag |
update_tag |
Modify an existing tag |
delete_tag |
Remove a tag (requires confirmation) |
create_trigger |
Create a new trigger |
update_trigger |
Modify an existing trigger |
delete_trigger |
Remove a trigger (requires confirmation) |
create_variable |
Create a new variable |
update_variable |
Modify an existing variable |
delete_variable |
Remove a variable (requires confirmation) |
enable_built_in_variables |
Enable built-in variable types in a workspace |
disable_built_in_variables |
Disable built-in variable types (requires confirmation) |
Server-Side Container Tools
| Tool | Description |
|---|---|
list_clients |
List all clients in a workspace |
get_client |
Get client details by ID |
create_client |
Create a new client |
update_client |
Modify an existing client |
delete_client |
Remove a client (requires confirmation) |
list_transformations |
List all transformations in a workspace |
get_transformation |
Get transformation details by ID |
create_transformation |
Create a new transformation |
update_transformation |
Modify an existing transformation |
delete_transformation |
Remove a transformation (requires confirmation) |
Publishing
| Tool | Description |
|---|---|
get_workspace_status |
Check pending changes and merge conflicts before versioning |
list_versions |
List all container versions with tag/trigger/variable counts |
create_version |
Create a version from workspace changes |
publish_version |
Publish a version (requires confirmation) |
Templates
| Tool | Description |
|---|---|
get_tag_templates |
Get GA4/HTML tag parameter examples |
get_trigger_templates |
Get trigger configuration examples |
list_templates |
List custom templates in a workspace |
get_template |
Get template details including template code |
create_template |
Create a custom template from .tpl code |
update_template |
Modify an existing template |
delete_template |
Remove a template (requires confirmation) |
import_gallery_template |
Import a template from the Community Gallery |
Resources & Prompts
Resources (URI-based access)
Access GTM data via structured URIs:
gtm://accounts
gtm://accounts/{id}/containers
gtm://accounts/{id}/containers/{id}/workspaces
gtm://accounts/.../workspaces/{id}/tags
gtm://accounts/.../workspaces/{id}/triggers
gtm://accounts/.../workspaces/{id}/variables
Prompts (Workflow templates)
| Prompt | Description |
|---|---|
audit_container |
Comprehensive container analysis |
generate_tracking_plan |
Markdown documentation generator |
suggest_ga4_setup |
GA4 implementation recommendations |
find_gallery_template |
Guide to find and import Community Gallery templates |
Better AI Context
For best results, install the GTM API skill so your AI assistant understands GTM's API structure, parameter formats, and validation rules.
Claude Code
# One-liner install
curl -sL https://github.com/paolobietolini/gtm-api-for-llms/archive/main.tar.gz | tar xz && \
mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && \
cp -r gtm-api-for-llms-main/skills/gtm-api ~/.claude/skills/ && \
rm -rf gtm-api-for-llms-main
Or clone and copy:
git clone https://github.com/paolobietolini/gtm-api-for-llms.git
cp -r gtm-api-for-llms/skills/gtm-api ~/.claude/skills/
OpenAI Codex
curl -sL https://github.com/paolobietolini/gtm-api-for-llms/archive/main.tar.gz | tar xz && \
mkdir -p ~/.codex/skills && \
cp -r gtm-api-for-llms-main/skills/gtm-api ~/.codex/skills/ && \
rm -rf gtm-api-for-llms-main
What does the skill include?
The GTM API for LLMs repository provides LLM-optimized documentation: request templates, validation rules, workflow algorithms, and complete schemas for all GTM entity types including server-side containers.
Architecture
- Protocol: Model Context Protocol (MCP) over HTTP
- Authentication: OAuth 2.1 with PKCE
- Standards: RFC 8414, RFC 7591, RFC 9728
Known Issues
🐛 autoEventFilter silently dropped by Google Tag Manager API
When creating or updating linkClick, click, or formSubmission triggers via the API, the autoEventFilter field (used for "Some Link Clicks"/"Some Form Submissions" conditions) is silently dropped by the Google Tag Manager API. The API returns 200 OK with a new fingerprint but does not persist the autoEventFilter.
This has been confirmed by HTTP-level debugging: the correct JSON is sent in the request body, but Google's response omits the field. The filter and customEventFilter fields work correctly.
Workaround: Configure autoEventFilter conditions manually through the GTM web interface. The MCP server can read triggers that have autoEventFilter set via the UI.
Status: #33
Links
Author
Paolo Bietolini
License
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