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Probably the most complete Apple Health MCP server

Project description

apple-health-mcp-server

PyPI version Python versions License: MIT Landing page

Make Claude your personal health AI — locally.

Read this in English / 日本語.

apple-health-mcp-server exposes the contents of your Apple Health export (export.xml plus the ECG CSV and GPX route files Apple ships alongside it) to any Model Context Protocol client — including Claude Desktop — through 17 read-oriented tools backed by a local DuckDB database.

Features

  • Comprehensive ingestion. Imports Record, Workout (with WorkoutEvent, WorkoutStatistics, WorkoutRoute, and WorkoutMetadataEntry), ActivitySummary, Correlation, Me, ExportDate, ECG voltage samples, and GPX route points. Categorical state-of-mind entries (iOS 17+) land in a dedicated table.
  • All data stays local — no external transmission. The importer reads files from disk, the server speaks MCP over stdio (HTTP is opt-in), and the only network artefact is whatever the client itself decides to send.
  • DuckDB-backed. Re-imports are idempotent thanks to deterministic deduplication; ad-hoc analysis through run_custom_query runs at native DuckDB speed.
  • Time-zone aware. GPX route timestamps are aligned to each parent workout's local offset so joins against XML-derived rows are clean.
  • Cross-platform. Tested on Ubuntu, macOS, and Windows against Python 3.12 / 3.13 / 3.14.
  • One-click Claude Desktop install. Drag-and-drop the MCPB bundle attached to every GitHub Release; see the Installation → Claude Desktop (MCPB bundle) section below.
  • 100% branch-tested. Every release gates on full coverage with pytest --cov-branch --cov-fail-under=100.

Installation

The recommended entry point is uvx, which fetches a one-shot virtualenv on demand and never pollutes the system Python:

uvx apple-health-mcp-server --help

Claude Desktop (one-click via MCPB bundle)

The easiest path on Claude Desktop is the MCPB bundle attached to each GitHub Release.

Prerequisite: the bundle wraps uvx apple-health-mcp-server serve, so install uv first (brew install uv on macOS, the official installer on Windows). Without uv on PATH Claude Desktop will fail with a generic spawn error after install.

Then:

  1. Download the latest apple-health-mcp-server-vX.Y.Z.mcpb from the release assets
  2. Open Claude Desktop's Settings → Connectors panel
  3. Drag-and-drop the .mcpb file onto the panel — Claude Desktop will install it and prompt to enable the server

The MCPB format is documented at https://github.com/anthropics/mcpb; both .dxt (legacy) and .mcpb extensions are accepted by Claude Desktop.

Claude Desktop (manual JSON config)

If you prefer to wire the server up by hand, edit claude_desktop_config.json:

  • macOS: ~/Library/Application Support/Claude/claude_desktop_config.json
  • Windows: %APPDATA%\Claude\claude_desktop_config.json
  • Linux: Claude Desktop is not yet released on Linux; use Claude Code below instead.
{
  "mcpServers": {
    "apple-health": {
      "command": "uvx",
      "args": ["apple-health-mcp-server", "serve"]
    }
  }
}

Then fully quit Claude Desktop and reopen — the config is only re-read at startup (closing the window is not enough).

Source: https://modelcontextprotocol.io/quickstart/user (fetched 2026-06-22).

Claude Code

Easiest path is the CLI helper, which writes the entry into the right scope and survives future schema tweaks:

claude mcp add --transport stdio --scope user apple-health -- uvx apple-health-mcp-server serve
  • --scope user registers the server for every project (writes to ~/.claude.json). Use --scope project to share via a version-controlled .mcp.json at the repo root, or --scope local (the default) for the current project only.
  • The -- separator is mandatory when the server command takes its own arguments — without it Claude Code would try to parse serve as one of its own flags.

Equivalent manual entry inside the chosen JSON file:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "apple-health": {
      "type": "stdio",
      "command": "uvx",
      "args": ["apple-health-mcp-server", "serve"],
      "env": {}
    }
  }
}

A running session does not auto-reload .mcp.json edits; restart Claude Code to pick them up. Stdio servers are not automatically reconnected after a crash either — restart the session if the server goes away mid-conversation.

Source: https://code.claude.com/docs/en/mcp (fetched 2026-06-22).

Codex CLI

Codex CLI stores MCP servers in TOML, not JSON. The simplest path is the helper command, which writes into ~/.codex/config.toml:

codex mcp add apple-health -- uvx apple-health-mcp-server serve

Equivalent manual entry in ~/.codex/config.toml (override the path with CODEX_HOME= if needed):

[mcp_servers.apple-health]
command = "uvx"
args = ["apple-health-mcp-server", "serve"]

Edits to config.toml take effect on the next codex invocation — restart any running session to apply them. The CLI also exposes codex mcp list / codex mcp get <name> / codex mcp remove <name> for inspection and cleanup.

Source: https://developers.openai.com/codex/mcp (fetched 2026-06-22).

Importing your export

Before any tool returns data you have to ingest your export once. Apple gives you a directory containing export.xml, an electrocardiograms/ folder, and a workout-routes/ folder; point the importer at the directory itself:

uvx apple-health-mcp-server import /path/to/apple_health_export

The import is idempotent — re-running it with a newer export merges the new rows into the existing database via the import_id column.

Phase 1 (XML parse) emits a single-line progress entry every 10 seconds (INFO progress: xml NN% (X / Y MB, ~Z min remaining)) so a streaming agent or human can confirm forward motion during a multi-minute parse. Tune the cadence via APPLE_HEALTH_IMPORT_PROGRESS_SECS (positive integer, clamped to 1..600); set it to 60 for quiet runs or 1 for debugging. Exports smaller than 1 MB skip the emitter entirely.

Database location

By default the database lands at the XDG-resolved data directory:

  • Linux / macOS: ~/.local/share/apple-health-mcp/health.duckdb
  • Windows: %LOCALAPPDATA%\apple-health-mcp\health.duckdb

Override with --db /custom/path/health.duckdb on either subcommand.

Locales

Apple Health localises the ECG CSV header labels to the iPhone language setting (the export.xml itself is locale-neutral). The importer recognises:

  • Verified: English, Japanese (both 記録日 and 記録日時 variants)
  • Best-effort: Chinese Simplified, Chinese Traditional, Korean — header strings are educated guesses and have not been confirmed against real exports from those locales

The authoritative source of truth for which locales the parser supports is the _VERIFIED_LOCALES and _BEST_EFFORT_LOCALES tuples in src/apple_health_mcp/importers/ecg.py (alongside the per-header _*_LABELS tuples they describe). Add a locale by extending both that file and the tuples above; this README section reflects them.

When the parser fails to match any locale, the warning log points to the GitHub issue tracker and asks for the first ten lines of the CSV so the locale can be added. The full guidance is emitted once per import run (further files in the same run get a short reference back to it). There is no privacy concern in those header lines — the importer skips Name and Date of Birth by design.

Distance and energy units (km, mi, kcal) come straight from the underlying HealthKit identifiers and are not localised; the total_distance_unit column on the workouts table records them faithfully.

Tools

17 tools are registered with FastMCP, grouped by family:

Family Tools
Record types & data list_record_types, query_records, get_record_statistics
Workouts list_workouts, get_workout_details, get_workout_route
Activity summaries get_activity_summaries
Heart rate get_heart_rate_samples
Correlations list_correlations, get_correlation_details
ECG list_ecg_readings, get_ecg_data
State of mind list_state_of_mind
Me characteristics get_me_attributes
Metadata & ops list_data_sources, get_import_history
Escape hatch run_custom_query (read-only validated SQL)

Compatibility

apple-health-mcp-server follows Semantic Versioning from v1.0.0 onward. While the project remains in the v0.x.y series, breaking changes can land in any minor release; the project minimises them but does not formally guarantee against them yet.

Public API surface

The following are considered part of the public API under SemVer:

  • MCP tool names, parameter signatures (including defaults), and top-level response field names — adding a new tool, parameter, or response field is a minor bump; renaming, removing, or changing the type of an existing one is a major bump. Tool responses are consumed by downstream LLM prompt templates, so renaming a returned key is as breaking as renaming a parameter.

  • DuckDB schema table names, column names, types, and NOT NULL constraints — adding a column is a minor bump; renaming, removing, retyping, or relaxing a NOT NULL on an existing column (or renaming a table) is a major bump. Relevant for run_custom_query consumers building SQL against the tables — the v0.1.4 imports.imported_at regression showed constraints are user-visible too, not just types.

  • CLI subcommand names and their required parameters (positional arguments and required flags alike) — same versioning rules apply.

  • Top-level Python identifiers exported via __all__ from the package root (apple_health_mcp) — e.g. __version__, REPO_URL, ISSUES_URL. Removing one of these or changing its type is a major bump.

  • Environment variables the server and importer read from the process environment. The current set:

    Name Purpose Default
    APPLE_HEALTH_TZ DuckDB session timezone used to render TIMESTAMPTZ columns. Overridden by --tz on the CLI when both are set. OS timezone
    APPLE_HEALTH_IMPORT_PROGRESS_SECS Cadence of the Phase 1 progress emitter on import. Integer seconds; out-of-range integers are clamped to 1..600, non-integer strings fall back to the default with a warning. Exports smaller than 1 MB skip the emitter entirely. 10
    APPLE_HEALTH_LOG_LEVEL stdlib logging level applied to the root logger (DEBUG/INFO/WARNING/ERROR). All logs land on stderr; stdout is reserved for the MCP stdio transport. INFO
    APPLE_HEALTH_LOG_FORMAT Log formatter shape. human is plain text; json emits one JSON object per line for log aggregators. human

    The server also honours the OS-standard XDG_DATA_HOME (Linux/macOS) and LOCALAPPDATA (Windows) when resolving the default DB path; those are part of the platform contract, not project-specific.

    Renaming, removing, or changing the parsing rules of any of these is a major bump. Adding a new env var is a minor bump.

  • CLI parameters — used by callers that pipe apple-health-mcp-server into shell scripts, service supervisors, or wire it into Claude Desktop / Claude Code configs:

    • Subcommands: import <export-dir>, serve
    • Top-level flags: --db <path> (DB path override, applies to both subcommands), --tz <name> (overrides APPLE_HEALTH_TZ)
    • serve flags: --transport stdio|http (default stdio), --host <addr> (HTTP bind host), --port <int> (HTTP port)

    Renaming a subcommand or flag, removing one, or changing the semantics of an existing one is a major bump. Adding a new optional flag or subcommand is a minor bump.

  • CLI exit codes — observed by shell-script callers:

    Code Meaning
    0 Success
    1 Any AppleHealthMCPError from the import or serve path (missing export, malformed DB, importer failure, server startup failure)
    2 Usage error from the CLI argument parser (unknown subcommand, missing required argument, bad flag value)

    Adding a new specific exit code (e.g. carving off 3 for "DB locked by another process") is a minor bump; collapsing or repurposing an existing code is a major bump.

  • DuckDB database file path conventions (see Database location) — the default XDG-resolved paths on each OS are part of the contract because users back them up, point monitoring at them, or symlink them across machines. Changing where the default DB lands is a major bump; supporting an additional override mechanism is a minor bump.

Anything not enumerated above — helper modules without an MCP-tool / CLI / DuckDB-schema / __all__ / env-var / exit-code / DB-path surface, identifiers prefixed with _ (private constants, helpers, internal exceptions), and module-internal constants — is not part of the public API and may change in any release. In particular:

  • Log-line format (e.g. progress: xml NN% (X / Y MB, ~Z min remaining)) is not part of the public API contract; the human-readable shape may change between releases without a SemVer bump. APPLE_HEALTH_LOG_FORMAT=json currently wraps the same human-readable string inside a JSON envelope's message field — it doesn't currently emit per-progress-event structured fields. If you need machine-parseable progress, please open an issue describing the use case; until a structured progress contract is published, treat all progress output as informational only.
  • MCP tool description text (the LLM-facing prose embedded in each tool registration) is not part of the public API contract; descriptions may be tightened, reworded, or reorganised without a SemVer bump as long as the parameter and return shape stay stable. Clients that rely on a tool should lock onto its name and signature, not its description prose.

Deprecation policy

(Applies from v1.0.0 onward — during v0.x.y, breaking changes can land in any minor release without going through this cadence; see the headline above.)

When something in the public API is scheduled for removal or rename:

  1. The deprecated item is marked in the CHANGELOG.md Deprecated section of the release that announces it, alongside the planned replacement and removal version
  2. The deprecated item keeps working for at least one minor release before being removed (e.g. 1.5.0 announces deprecation, 1.6.x continues to ship the old name, 2.0.0 removes it)
  3. The actual removal lands in the next major version bump

Security exception

A CVE-grade flaw inside a deprecated surface (e.g. a run_custom_query parameter that turns out to leak data, or a tool whose response shape exposes something it shouldn't) may break the deprecation cadence above: the fix can ship as a removal or breaking change in any release, including a patch. Such breaks are called out under a Security heading in CHANGELOG.md so downstream consumers can spot them in a single scan, and a security advisory is published on the GitHub repository's Security tab. Without this carve-out, the deprecation policy would bind the maintainer to keep a known-bad surface alive for a full minor cycle, which is worse than the surprise break it would prevent.

Updating

uvx caches the package on first run and re-uses that cached copy on subsequent invocations, so a new release does not install itself automatically. Pick one:

  • Always run the latest — use the @latest suffix whenever you want the newest published version:

    uvx apple-health-mcp-server@latest serve
    

    Why not --refresh? --refresh revalidates PyPI metadata but does not always rebuild the cached tool environment, so a freshly published release can be silently shadowed by the previously-cached version (see astral-sh/uv#16991). @latest is the method recommended by the uv docs and is unambiguous.

  • Pin a specific version — write the version directly in your Claude Desktop / Codex / Cursor config so an unrelated uvx cache eviction cannot move you off it:

    {
      "mcpServers": {
        "apple-health": {
          "command": "uvx",
          "args": ["apple-health-mcp-server==0.1.0", "serve"]
        }
      }
    }
    

See CHANGELOG.md for the per-release notes.

Troubleshooting

Every tool returns "No Apple Health data has been imported yet."

The MCP server boots even when the local DuckDB file is empty so the client still sees the full tool list, but every tool that needs data returns this guidance string until you run the importer:

apple-health-mcp-server import /path/to/apple_health_export

After the import finishes, restart the MCP server (quit and reopen Claude Desktop / Claude Code / Codex, or stop and re-run the serve process). The server keeps a read-only DuckDB snapshot for the lifetime of the process; new rows only become visible to a fresh connection.

get_import_history is the one tool that stays callable on an empty DB — it returns an empty list, which is how you confirm "no imports yet" from the client side.

Development

uv sync
uv run pytest

See CLAUDE.md for the full command list, conventions, and the mandatory /code-review --fix policy on every pull request.

Contributing

Issues and pull requests in English or Japanese are both first class; see CLAUDE.md §6 for the full language policy.

License

MIT

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