An MCP (Model Context Protocol) server for booking Uber rides through AI assistants.
- OAuth 2.0 authentication with Uber
- Get price estimates for rides
- Request Uber rides
- Check ride status
- Cancel rides
npm install -g mcp-uber
npx mcp-uber
- Go to Uber Developer Dashboard
- Click "Sign in" and either:
- Use an existing Uber rider/driver account
- Create a new account specifically for development
💡 Tip: For organizations, create an email alias (e.g., dev@yourcompany.com) instead of using a personal account for easier ownership transfer.
- In the Developer Dashboard, click "Create App" (top right corner)
- Fill in the required information:
- App Name: Your application name
- Description: Brief description of what your app does
- Click "Create"
- Navigate to your app in the dashboard
- Go to the Auth tab
- You'll find:
- Client ID: Public identifier for your app
- Client Secret: Private key (keep this secure!)
- Server Token: For server-side requests
- In the Auth tab, add your redirect URI:
- For local testing:
http://localhost:3000/callback
- For production: Your actual callback URL
- For local testing:
- Select required scopes:
profile
- User's basic profile informationrequest
- Request rides on user's behalfride_request
- View and manage active ride requests
request
scope is privileged and requires Uber approval for production use. During development, your account can use it without approval.
Create environment variables with your credentials (see Configuration section below)
Add to your Claude Desktop configuration (~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
):
{
"mcpServers": {
"uber": {
"command": "mcp-uber",
"env": {
"UBER_CLIENT_ID": "your_client_id",
"UBER_CLIENT_SECRET": "your_client_secret",
"UBER_REDIRECT_URI": "http://localhost:3000/callback",
"UBER_ENVIRONMENT": "sandbox"
}
}
}
}
Add to your Claude Desktop configuration:
{
"mcpServers": {
"uber": {
"command": "npx",
"args": ["mcp-uber"],
"env": {
"UBER_CLIENT_ID": "your_client_id",
"UBER_CLIENT_SECRET": "your_client_secret",
"UBER_REDIRECT_URI": "http://localhost:3000/callback",
"UBER_ENVIRONMENT": "sandbox"
}
}
}
}
- uber_get_auth_url - Get OAuth authorization URL
- uber_set_access_token - Set user's access token
- uber_get_price_estimates - Get price estimates for a ride
- uber_request_ride - Request an Uber ride
- uber_get_ride_status - Check ride request status
- uber_cancel_ride - Cancel a ride request
- Use
uber_get_auth_url
to get the authorization URL - User visits the URL and authorizes your app
- After callback, exchange the code for an access token
- Use
uber_set_access_token
to store the token - Now you can make API calls
The MCP server requires the following environment variables:
UBER_CLIENT_ID
: Your Uber app client IDUBER_CLIENT_SECRET
: Your Uber app client secretUBER_REDIRECT_URI
: OAuth callback URL (default:http://localhost:3000/callback
)UBER_ENVIRONMENT
: Eithersandbox
orproduction
(default:sandbox
)
-
Use sandbox mode for testing:
- Set
UBER_ENVIRONMENT=sandbox
in your environment - Sandbox mode simulates ride requests without real drivers
- Perfect for development and testing
- Set
-
Test the OAuth flow:
- Use the
uber_get_auth_url
tool to get an authorization URL - Visit the URL and authorize your app
- After authorization, Uber will redirect to your callback URL with a code
- Exchange the code for an access token (you'll need to set up your own callback handler)
- Use
uber_set_access_token
to store the token in the MCP server
- Use the
-
Setting up a callback handler:
- For testing, you can use a simple Express server (see
examples/oauth-server.js
in the GitHub repo) - For production, implement a secure callback handler in your application
- The callback URL must match exactly what's configured in your Uber app
- For testing, you can use a simple Express server (see
-
Sandbox Mode (default):
- Simulated rides and drivers
- No real charges
- Perfect for testing
- Limited to your developer account
-
Production Mode:
- Real rides and charges
- Requires Uber approval for privileged scopes
- Must pass Uber's review process
- Never commit credentials: Keep your Client Secret secure
- Use environment variables: Don't hardcode credentials
- Implement proper token storage: The current in-memory storage is for demo only
- Validate redirect URIs: Ensure your callback URLs are properly configured
- Rate limits apply (check Uber's documentation)
- Privileged scopes require approval for production use
- Sandbox mode has some limitations compared to production
- "Invalid scope" error: Your app needs approval for privileged scopes in production
- "Invalid redirect URI": Make sure your redirect URI exactly matches what's configured in the Uber dashboard
- "Unauthorized" errors: Check that your access token is valid and not expired