Fire in da houseTop Tip:Paying $100+ per month for Perplexity, MidJourney, Runway, ChatGPT and other tools is crazy - get all your AI tools in one site starting at $15 per month with Galaxy AI Fire in da houseCheck it out free

ticktick-mcp-server

MCP.Pizza Chef: alexarevalo9

The ticktick-mcp-server is a Model Context Protocol server that integrates with the TickTick task management platform. It enables comprehensive task and project management, including creating, reading, updating, and deleting tasks and projects, managing subtasks, setting priorities, due dates, reminders, and recurring rules. It supports secure OAuth2 authentication and provides detailed error handling, making it ideal for automating and enhancing task workflows within TickTick.

Use This MCP server To

Create, update, and delete tasks in TickTick via MCP Manage projects and customize project views programmatically Handle subtasks within parent tasks for detailed task hierarchies Set task priorities, due dates, reminders, and recurring schedules Authenticate securely using OAuth2 for TickTick API access Automate task workflows and reminders based on real-time context Fetch specific tasks by project and task IDs for detailed queries Integrate TickTick task data into AI-powered productivity tools

README

TickTick MCP Server

smithery badge

MCP Server for the TickTick API, enabling task management, project organization, habit tracking, and more.

Features

  • Task Management: Create, read, update, and delete tasks with all available properties
  • 📊 Project Management: Create, read, update, and delete projects with customizable views
  • 📋 Subtask Support: Full support for managing subtasks within parent tasks
  • 🔄 Complete Task Control: Set priorities, due dates, reminders, and recurring rules
  • 🔐 OAuth Authentication: Full OAuth2 implementation for secure API access
  • ⚠️ Comprehensive Error Handling: Clear error messages for common issues

Tools

  1. get_task_by_ids

    • Get a specific task by project ID and task ID
    • Inputs:
      • projectId (string): Project identifier
      • taskId (string): Task identifier
    • Returns: Task object matching TickTickTaskSchema
  2. create_task

    • Create a new task in a project
    • Inputs:
      • title (string): Task title
      • projectId (string): Project id
      • content (optional string): Task content
      • desc (optional string): Task description
      • isAllDay (optional boolean): Is all day task
      • startDate (optional string): Task start date in "yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ssZ" format
      • dueDate (optional string): Task due date in "yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ssZ" format
      • timeZone (optional string): Task time zone (e.g., "America/Los_Angeles")
      • reminders (optional string[]): List of reminder triggers in iCalendar format
      • repeatFlag (optional string): Task repeat flag in iCalendar format
      • priority (optional number): Task priority (None: 0, Low: 1, Medium: 3, High: 5)
      • sortOrder (optional string): Task sort order
      • items (optional array): List of subtasks with:
        • title (string): Subtask item title
        • startDate (optional string): Subtask date in "yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ssZ" format
        • isAllDay (optional boolean): Is all day subtask item
        • sortOrder (optional number): Subtask item sort order
        • timeZone (optional string): Subtask timezone
        • status (optional number): Completion status (Normal: 0, Completed: 1)
        • completedTime (optional string): Completion time in "yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ssZ" format
    • Returns: Created task object matching TickTickTaskSchema
  3. update_task

    • Update an existing task
    • Inputs:
      • taskId (string): Task identifier - Path
      • id (string): Task identifier - Body
      • projectId (string): Project id
      • All optional fields from create_task
    • Returns: Updated task object matching TickTickTaskSchema
  4. complete_task

    • Mark a task as completed
    • Inputs:
      • taskId (string): Task identifier
      • projectId (string): Project identifier
    • Returns: void
  5. delete_task

    • Delete a task from a project
    • Inputs:
      • taskId (string): Task identifier
      • projectId (string): Project identifier
    • Returns: void
  6. get_user_projects

    • Get all projects for the authenticated user
    • Inputs: None
    • Returns: Array of project objects matching TickTickProjectSchema
  7. get_project_by_id

    • Get a specific project by ID
    • Inputs:
      • projectId (string): Project identifier
    • Returns: Project object matching TickTickProjectSchema
  8. get_project_with_data

    • Get project details along with tasks and columns
    • Inputs:
      • projectId (string): Project identifier
    • Returns: Object containing:
      • project: Project object matching TickTickProjectSchema
      • tasks: Array of task objects matching TickTickTaskSchema
      • columns: Optional array of column objects with:
        • id (optional string)
        • projectId (optional string)
        • name (optional string)
        • sortOrder (optional number)
  9. create_project

    • Create a new project
    • Inputs:
      • name (string): Project name
      • color (optional string): Project color (default: '#4772FA')
      • viewMode (optional string): View mode ('list', 'kanban', 'timeline') (default: 'list')
      • kind (optional string): Project kind ('TASK', 'NOTE') (default: 'TASK')
    • Returns: Created project object matching TickTickProjectSchema
  10. update_project

    • Update an existing project
    • Inputs:
      • projectId (string): Project identifier
      • name (optional string): Project name
      • color (optional string): Project color
      • sortOrder (optional number): Project sort order
      • viewMode (optional string): View mode ('list', 'kanban', 'timeline')
      • kind (optional string): Project kind ('TASK', 'NOTE')
    • Returns: Updated project object matching TickTickProjectSchema
  11. delete_project

    • Delete a project
    • Inputs:
      • projectId (string): Project identifier
    • Returns: void

Schema References

  • TickTickTaskSchema: Defines the structure for task objects including:

    • Basic task properties (id, title, description)
    • Dates and time settings
    • Priority and status
    • Checklist items and subtasks
  • TickTickProjectSchema: Defines the structure for project objects including:

    • Project identification and naming
    • Display settings (color, view mode)
    • Permissions and organization

Tasks Properties

When creating or updating tasks, you can include these properties:

  • Priority Levels:
    • 0: None
    • 1: Low
    • 3: Medium
    • 5: High
  • Status Values:
    • 0: Normal (not completed)
    • 2: Completed
  • Reminder Format:
    • Example: ["TRIGGER:P0DT9H0M0S", "TRIGGER:PT0S"]
    • Follows iCalendar TRIGGER format
  • Recurring Rules (repeatFlag):
    • Example: "RRULE:FREQ=DAILY;INTERVAL=1"
    • Uses RFC 5545 recurrence rules
  • Date Format:
    • ISO 8601 format: "yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ssZ"
    • Example: "2019-11-13T03:00:00+0000"

Projects Properties

When creating or updating projects, you can use these properties:

  • View Modes:
    • "list": Standard list view
    • "kanban": Kanban board view
    • "timeline": Timeline view
  • Project Kinds:
    • "TASK": Task-oriented project
    • "NOTE": Note-oriented project

Setup

OAuth Authentication

To enable OAuth authentication with TickTick, you'll need to register your app and obtain API credentials:

First-Time Authorization Flow

When using the TickTick MCP server for the first time:

  1. You'll be prompted to authorize the application
  2. A browser window will open with the TickTick login page
  3. After login, you'll be asked to grant permissions
  4. The access token will be displayed in the page
  5. Copy this token and set it as the TICKTICK_ACCESS_TOKEN environment variable

Generate Access Token

When you need to generate a new access token (either for first-time setup or when the token expires), follow these steps:

  1. Configure your credentials using one of these methods:

    Option 1: .env file (Recommended)

    Create a .env file in your project root:

    TICKTICK_CLIENT_ID="<YOUR_CLIENT_ID>"
    TICKTICK_CLIENT_SECRET="<YOUR_CLIENT_SECRET>"

    Then load it:

    source .env

    This method is recommended because:

    • Credentials persist between terminal sessions
    • Easier to manage multiple configurations
    • Less prone to shell history leaks
    • Can be easily backed up (remember to exclude from version control)
    Option 2: Terminal Environment Variables

    Use single quotes if your credentials contain special characters. Note that these variables will only persist in your current terminal session:

    export TICKTICK_CLIENT_ID='<YOUR_CLIENT_ID>'
    export TICKTICK_CLIENT_SECRET='<YOUR_CLIENT_SECRET>'
  2. Run the authentication command:

    If using the published package:

    npx @alexarevalo.ia/mcp-server-ticktick ticktick-auth

    If running the MCP server locally:

    npm run start:auth

    The process will:

    • Launch your default browser
    • Direct you to TickTick's login page
    • Request necessary permissions
    • Generate and display your access token
  3. Save the access token:

    echo "TICKTICK_ACCESS_TOKEN=\"<GENERATED_TOKEN>\"" >> .env
    source .env

Security Tips:

  • Add .env to your .gitignore file
  • Never commit credentials to version control
  • Access tokens expire after 180 days - you'll need to regenerate them

Usage with Claude Desktop

To use this with Claude Desktop, add the following to your claude_desktop_config.json:

NPX

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "ticktick": {
      "command": "npx",
      "args": ["-y", "@alexarevalo.ai/mcp-server-ticktick"],
      "env": {
        "TICKTICK_CLIENT_ID": "<YOUR_CLIENT_ID>",
        "TICKTICK_CLIENT_SECRET": "<YOUR_CLIENT_SECRET>",
        "TICKTICK_ACCESS_TOKEN": "<YOUR_ACCESS_TOKEN>"
      }
    }
  }
}
Docker
{
  "mcpServers": {
    "ticktick": {
      "command": "docker",
      "args": [
        "run",
        "-i",
        "--rm",
        "-e",
        "TICKTICK_CLIENT_ID",
        "-e",
        "TICKTICK_CLIENT_SECRET",
        "-e",
        "TICKTICK_ACCESS_TOKEN",
        "mcp/ticktick"
      ],
      "env": {
        "TICKTICK_CLIENT_ID": "<YOUR_CLIENT_ID>",
        "TICKTICK_CLIENT_SECRET": "<YOUR_CLIENT_SECRET>",
        "TICKTICK_ACCESS_TOKEN": "<YOUR_ACCESS_TOKEN>"
      }
    }
  }
}

Installing via Smithery

To install ticktick-mcp-server for Claude Desktop automatically via Smithery:

npx -y @smithery/cli install @alexarevalo9/ticktick-mcp-server --client claude

Build

Docker build:

docker build -t mcp/ticktick -f src/ticktick/Dockerfile .

License

This MCP server is licensed under the MIT License. This means you are free to use, modify, and distribute the software, subject to the terms and conditions of the MIT License. For more details, please see the LICENSE file in the project repository.

ticktick-mcp-server FAQ

How does ticktick-mcp-server authenticate with TickTick?
It uses full OAuth2 implementation to securely access the TickTick API.
Can I manage subtasks with this MCP server?
Yes, it provides full support for creating, reading, updating, and deleting subtasks.
What error handling features does ticktick-mcp-server offer?
It includes comprehensive error messages for common API and task management issues.
Is it possible to set recurring tasks using this server?
Yes, you can define recurring rules for tasks through the MCP server.
Can I customize project views with this MCP server?
Yes, it supports creating and updating projects with customizable views.
Does the server support fetching tasks by specific IDs?
Yes, you can retrieve tasks by providing project and task identifiers.
How secure is the ticktick-mcp-server?
It uses OAuth2 for secure authentication and follows best practices for API access.
Can this MCP server be used to automate reminders?
Yes, it supports setting reminders and automating task notifications.