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Headless MCP server for Screaming Frog SEO Spider — run crawls, export and analyze crawl data via the CLI, no GUI session required. Built for scheduled audits, CI, and AI agents.

Project description

Screaming Frog SEO Spider MCP Server (headless)

A headless MCP (Model Context Protocol) server for Screaming Frog SEO Spider. It drives the SF command line and saved crawl database directly, so Claude (or any MCP-compatible client) can run crawls, export crawl data, and analyze the results with the Screaming Frog GUI closed: on your laptop, on a server, or inside scheduled audits and CI pipelines.

This is a community project, not affiliated with Screaming Frog. Since SEO Spider v24 there is also an official MCP built into the app. The two work differently and solve different problems.

How this differs from the official Screaming Frog MCP

Screaming Frog shipped an official MCP server in SEO Spider v24. It's substantial: around 29 tools covering crawl control (start, pause, resume, progress), reports and bulk exports with field selection, URL-level inspection, screenshots, embeddings exports, and optionally a Node.js script runner with npm and filesystem read/write tools. It runs in two modes, either a Streamable HTTP server inside the open app, or a STDIO mode where the MCP client launches the Spider itself, headless. Setup is documented for Claude Desktop and LM Studio.

If you want maximum capability in an interactive session (visualizations, crawl comparison, screenshots, scripted post-processing of exports), use the official MCP. It does far more, and it's maintained by the vendor.

This server makes a different trade: it's a small, deliberately limited wrapper around SF's CLI and the saved crawl database, built for runs where nobody is watching.

Locked-down by design. Eight read-and-export tools, nothing else. No script runner, no npm install, no filesystem write access. The official MCP offers all three, and its own docs note that enabling the Node runtime "allows the execution of arbitrary code on your system" and should only be granted to a fully trusted client. There's also an SF_ALLOWED_DOMAINS allowlist to restrict what an agent is able to crawl. When an agent runs unattended on a schedule, a tool surface this small is a feature.

Installs anywhere, plainly. A pip/uv-installable Python package with a one-line stdio config on any MCP client (Claude Code, Cursor, whatever) on macOS, Linux, or Windows. The official STDIO mode ships as a Claude Desktop extension (.mcpb); the HTTP mode means opening the app and starting the server from its settings.

Light process model. Screaming Frog only runs while a tool actually needs it. The official server is the Spider application running for the whole session, whichever mode you pick.

A few tools the official set doesn't have: aggregate_crawl_data for counts and distributions computed server-side (the official path to "how many 404s" is a full export, or a Node script), delete_crawl and storage_summary for cleaning up SF's crawl database (their sf_clear_crawl clears a paused crawl, it doesn't manage stored ones), regex filtering across any column of any export via read_crawl_data, and sf_check pre-flight diagnostics that catch license problems and GUI database locks before you waste a crawl.

What it feels like from chat. The official server is stateful: you ask it to load a crawl by ID, the Spider holds it in memory for the session, and follow-up questions answer in under a second. The cost is that the session owns SF's database the whole conversation, and exports come back as full inline dumps unless the model saves files and writes Node scripts to slice them (the approach their own docs recommend for staying inside the context window). This server is stateless: each export spawns the SF CLI fresh, so the first answer on a crawl takes longer, but you can just ask ("list my crawls, export the latest one") without managing IDs or sessions, reads return only the filtered rows you asked for, and the database is released between calls. For "show me the 404s on a 100k-URL crawl", the difference is the whole export in context versus a page of matching rows.

Typical split: crawl interactively in the GUI with your full config, close it, and let this server handle the unattended side. That covers scheduled audits, CI checks, and agents querying the saved data. Both need a licensed Screaming Frog install on the same machine; neither is a cloud crawler. Note that this server requires the GUI to be closed (SF's database allows one process at a time).

See it in action

The Pre-Launch Website Audit skill for Claude Code uses this MCP server for its technical SEO and on-page audits, site-wide crawl data, custom extractions, bulk analysis across all URLs. The skill runs 5 coordinated sub-audits and works without SF (bash fallbacks), but Screaming Frog is the biggest upgrade for crawl-dependent checks.

Prerequisites

  1. Screaming Frog SEO Spider installed on your machine (tested with v23.x and v24.x, should work with v16+). Download from: https://www.screamingfrog.co.uk/seo-spider/

  2. A valid Screaming Frog license. The free version has a 500-URL crawl limit. Most MCP features (headless CLI, saving/loading crawls, exports) require a paid license.

  3. Python 3.10+

Important: How the Workflow Works

Screaming Frog uses an internal database that can only be accessed by one process at a time. This means:

You must close the Screaming Frog GUI before the MCP server can access crawl data.

The typical workflow is:

  1. Run your crawl — either through the SF GUI (with all your custom settings, filters, etc.) or via the MCP crawl_site tool.
  2. Close the Screaming Frog GUI — the GUI locks the crawl database. The MCP server's headless CLI cannot read or export data while the GUI is running.
  3. Use the MCP tools — once the GUI is closed, you can list crawls, export data, read CSVs, and more through your AI assistant.

If you forget to close the GUI, the server will detect it and show a clear error message telling you to quit SF first.

Setup

Option A: Install from PyPI (recommended)

Install as a persistent uv tool so the server starts instantly:

uv tool install screaming-frog-mcp

This puts a screaming-frog-mcp executable on your PATH (typically ~/.local/bin/screaming-frog-mcp). Update later with uv tool upgrade screaming-frog-mcp.

Alternatively, install with pip:

pip install screaming-frog-mcp

Avoid uvx screaming-frog-mcp in MCP client configs. uvx resolves and downloads the package environment at launch. On a cold cache this can exceed the client's 60-second initialize timeout, causing intermittent "Could not attach to MCP server" errors. A persistent install never touches the network at startup.

Option B: Clone and install from source

git clone https://github.com/bzsasson/screaming-frog-mcp.git
cd screaming-frog-mcp
python3 -m venv .venv
source .venv/bin/activate
pip install -r requirements.txt

Configure the CLI path

The default Screaming Frog CLI path works for macOS. If you're on Linux or Windows, set the SF_CLI_PATH environment variable:

OS Default Path
macOS /Applications/Screaming Frog SEO Spider.app/Contents/MacOS/ScreamingFrogSEOSpiderLauncher
Linux /usr/bin/screamingfrogseospider
Windows C:\Program Files (x86)\Screaming Frog SEO Spider\ScreamingFrogSEOSpiderCli.exe

If you cloned the repo, copy .env.example to .env and edit it.

Add to Claude Code

If installed via uv tool install or pip:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "screaming-frog": {
      "command": "/path/to/screaming-frog-mcp",
      "args": [],
      "env": {
        "SF_CLI_PATH": "/path/to/ScreamingFrogSEOSpiderLauncher"
      }
    }
  }
}

Find the executable path with which screaming-frog-mcp (e.g. ~/.local/bin/screaming-frog-mcp for uv tool installs). Use the full absolute path, since GUI apps don't inherit your shell's PATH.

If cloned from source:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "screaming-frog": {
      "command": "/path/to/screaming-frog-mcp/.venv/bin/python",
      "args": ["/path/to/screaming-frog-mcp/sf_mcp.py"]
    }
  }
}

Add to Claude Desktop

Add to your Claude Desktop config (claude_desktop_config.json), using the same absolute executable path:

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "screaming-frog": {
      "command": "/path/to/screaming-frog-mcp",
      "args": [],
      "env": {
        "SF_CLI_PATH": "/path/to/ScreamingFrogSEOSpiderLauncher"
      }
    }
  }
}

Restart Claude Desktop after editing the config.

Available Tools

Tool Description
sf_check Verify Screaming Frog is installed, check version and license status
crawl_site Start a headless background crawl (see note below)
crawl_status Check progress of a running crawl
list_crawls List all saved crawls with their Database IDs
export_crawl Export crawl data as CSV files (many export options available)
read_crawl_data Read exported CSV data with pagination, filtering, and column selection
aggregate_crawl_data Counts and group-by breakdowns over exported data ("how many 404s", "status code distribution") without reading rows into context
delete_crawl Permanently delete a crawl from the database
storage_summary Show disk usage of SF's crawl storage

Usage Examples

Check installation

"Is Screaming Frog installed and licensed?"

The assistant will call sf_check and report version/license info.

Work with existing crawls (recommended flow)

For most use cases, crawl in the Screaming Frog GUI where you have full control over configuration, JavaScript rendering, crawl scope, custom extraction, etc. Then close the GUI and use the MCP to analyze the results:

After you've crawled a site in the Screaming Frog GUI and closed it:

"List my saved crawls" "Export the crawl for example.com" "Show me all pages with missing meta descriptions" "What are the 404 pages?"

Crawl a site via MCP (optional)

"Crawl https://example.com"

The crawl_site tool can kick off headless crawls via CLI. This is useful for quick re-crawls or automated workflows, but note the limitations compared to the GUI:

  • Uses default crawl settings (no custom extraction, JavaScript rendering config, etc.)
  • You can pass a .seospiderconfig file to customize settings (including crawl URL limits), but the GUI is easier for complex setups
  • The crawl must finish and save before you can export data

Export options

The server supports all of Screaming Frog's export tabs, bulk exports, and reports. Ask the assistant to read the screaming-frog://export-reference resource for the full list, or specify them directly:

export_tabs: "Internal:All,Response Codes:All,Page Titles:All"
bulk_export: "All Inlinks,All Outlinks"
save_report: "Crawl Overview"

Configuration

Environment variables

Variable Description Default
SF_CLI_PATH Path to the Screaming Frog CLI executable macOS default path
SF_ALLOWED_DOMAINS Comma-separated list of allowed crawl target domains. When set, crawl_site only accepts URLs matching these domains. Empty (all domains allowed)
SF_CONFIG_DIR Directory containing .seospiderconfig files that crawl_site can load. ~/.config/sf-mcp/configs/
SF_EXPORT_TTL_SECONDS How long exported CSV files are kept before auto-cleanup. Increase for multi-hour audit sessions. 3600 (1 hour)
SF_EXPORT_TIMEOUT_SECONDS Max time to wait for an export_crawl operation to complete. Increase for very large crawls (100k+ URLs). 300 (5 minutes)

Filtering modes

read_crawl_data supports three filter modes via the filter_mode parameter:

Mode Behavior Example
contains (default) Case-insensitive substring match filter_value="4" matches 400, 204, 1450
exact Case-insensitive exact match filter_value="404" matches only 404
regex Python regex (case-insensitive) filter_value="^[45]" matches 4xx and 5xx

Temp file cleanup

Exported CSVs are stored in ~/.cache/sf-mcp/exports/ and are automatically cleaned up after 1 hour (configurable via SF_EXPORT_TTL_SECONDS).

Troubleshooting

Server won't connect at all? ("Could not attach to MCP server", "failed to connect") See TROUBLESHOOTING.md for a step-by-step diagnostic guide: testing the server manually, verifying the MCP handshake, and finding your client's logs.

Problem Solution
"GUI is already running" error Quit the Screaming Frog application, then retry
Empty CSV exports (headers only, 0 data rows) The GUI likely has the database locked — close it and re-export
CLI not found Check that SF_CLI_PATH in .env points to the correct executable
Crawl not appearing in list_crawls Make sure you saved the crawl in the GUI (File > Save) before closing
Export times out Large crawls may need more time — set SF_EXPORT_TIMEOUT_SECONDS to a higher value (e.g. 600), or export fewer tabs
list_crawls fails on Windows Fixed in v0.2.2 — update with uv tool upgrade screaming-frog-mcp or pip install -U screaming-frog-mcp
"Could not attach to MCP server" / initialize timeout Your config launches the server via uvx, which downloads dependencies at startup and can exceed the 60s handshake timeout on a cold cache. Switch to a persistent install (uv tool install screaming-frog-mcp) and point command at the installed executable, per Setup

License

MIT

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