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TfL MCP Server for Claude Code 12 tools — connect in under 2 minutes

Built by Vinkius GDPR 12 Tools CLI

Claude Code is Anthropic's agentic CLI for terminal-first development. Add TfL as an MCP server in one command and Claude Code will discover every tool at runtime. ideal for automation pipelines, CI/CD integration, and headless workflows via Vinkius.

Vinkius supports streamable HTTP and SSE.

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The modern way to manage MCP Servers — no config files, no terminal commands. Install TfL and 2,500+ MCP Servers from a single visual interface.

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Classic Setup·bash
# Your Vinkius token. get it at cloud.vinkius.com
claude mcp add tfl --transport http "https://edge.vinkius.com/[YOUR_TOKEN_HERE]/mcp"
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* Every MCP server runs on Vinkius-managed infrastructure inside AWS - a purpose-built runtime with per-request V8 isolates, Ed25519 signed audit chains, and sub-40ms cold starts optimized for native MCP execution. See our infrastructure

About TfL MCP Server

Connect your TfL Unified API London public transport data platform to any AI agent and take full control of real-time Tube and bus tracking, multimodal journey planning, line status monitoring, and Santander Cycles availability through natural conversation.

Claude Code registers TfL as an MCP server in a single terminal command. Once connected, Claude Code discovers all 12 tools at runtime and can call them headlessly. ideal for CI/CD pipelines, cron jobs, and automated workflows where TfL data drives decisions without human intervention.

What you can do

  • Real-Time Arrivals — Get live arrival predictions for any Tube station, bus stop, DLR, Overground, Elizabeth line, tram, river, or cable-car stop
  • Stop Point Search — Find any TfL stop point by station name, street, or landmark across all transport modes
  • Line Status — Check current service status for all Tube lines, bus routes, DLR, Overground, Elizabeth line, and more
  • Journey Planning — Plan door-to-door multimodal trips combining Tube, bus, DLR, Overground, Elizabeth line, tram, walking, and cycling
  • Stop Details — Get comprehensive station information including accessibility, fare zones, and step-free access
  • Santander Cycles — Browse all bike docking stations with real-time availability (bikes and empty docks)
  • Road Status — Monitor London road conditions, closures, and disruptions for driving planning
  • Place Search — Discover places and points of interest across London by category
  • Transport Modes — Explore all available transport modes in the TfL network
  • Vehicle Compliance — Check ULEZ and Congestion Charge compliance for registered vehicles

The TfL MCP Server exposes 12 tools through the Vinkius. Connect it to Claude Code in under two minutes — no API keys to rotate, no infrastructure to provision, no vendor lock-in. Your configuration, your data, your control.

How to Connect TfL to Claude Code via MCP

Follow these steps to integrate the TfL MCP Server with Claude Code.

01

Install Claude Code

Run npm install -g @anthropic-ai/claude-code if not already installed

02

Add the MCP Server

Run the command above in your terminal

03

Verify the connection

Run claude mcp to list connected servers, or type /mcp inside a session

04

Start using TfL

Ask Claude: "Using TfL, show me...". 12 tools are ready

Why Use Claude Code with the TfL MCP Server

Claude Code provides unique advantages when paired with TfL through the Model Context Protocol.

01

Single-command setup: `claude mcp add` registers the server instantly. no config files to edit or applications to restart

02

Terminal-native workflow means MCP tools integrate seamlessly into shell scripts, CI/CD pipelines, and automated DevOps tasks

03

Claude Code runs headlessly, enabling unattended batch processing using TfL tools in cron jobs or deployment scripts

04

Built by the same team that created the MCP protocol, ensuring first-class compatibility and the fastest adoption of new protocol features

TfL + Claude Code Use Cases

Practical scenarios where Claude Code combined with the TfL MCP Server delivers measurable value.

01

CI/CD integration: embed TfL tool calls in your deployment pipeline to validate configurations or fetch secrets before shipping

02

Headless batch processing: schedule Claude Code to query TfL nightly and generate reports without human intervention

03

Shell scripting: pipe TfL outputs into other CLI tools for data transformation, filtering, and aggregation

04

Infrastructure monitoring: run Claude Code in a cron job to query TfL status endpoints and alert on anomalies

TfL MCP Tools for Claude Code (12)

These 12 tools become available when you connect TfL to Claude Code via MCP:

01

get_arrivals

g., 940GZZLUSCL for Oxford Circus Underground, or 490007653 for a bus stop). Returns predicted arrival times, line names, destination stations, time to station in minutes, vehicle IDs, expected arrival timestamps, and service types (tube, bus, dlr, elizabeth-line, overground, tram, river, cable-car). Essential for real-time arrival awareness, passenger waiting time estimation, trip timing, and connection coordination across the entire London transport network. AI agents should reference this when users ask "when is the next Northern Line train at Bank", "show upcoming buses at stop 490007653", or need real-time arrival predictions for any TfL stop point. Stop IDs can be found using search_stop_point. Get real-time arrival predictions for a specific TfL stop point

02

get_bike_point

Returns dock ID, common name, precise location (latitude, longitude, address), total capacity, current available bikes, current empty docks, installation date, last update timestamp, and operational status. Essential for dock-level bike availability checks, capacity planning, and real-time bike-sharing awareness for specific docking stations. AI agents should use this when users ask "how many bikes are at dock BikePoints_1234", "tell me about the docking station at Hyde Park Corner", or need specific docking station details for bike hire planning. Get detailed information about a specific Santander Cycles docking station

03

get_bike_points

Returns docking station IDs, common names, geographic coordinates, total bike capacity, number of available bikes, number of empty docks, installation date, and operational status. Covers thousands of docking stations across central London and expanding into outer boroughs. Essential for bike hire planning, dock availability awareness, cycle route planning, and understanding London's bike-sharing network coverage. AI agents should reference this when users ask "where are the nearest bike docking stations", "how many bikes are available at this dock", or need to identify bike hire options for last-mile connectivity. List all Santander Cycles (bike hire) docking stations across London

04

get_journey

Returns multiple route options combining tube, bus, dlr, overground, elizabeth-line, tram, river, walking, and cycling. Each route includes total duration, walking distance, number of interchanges, fare estimates, CO2 savings, and detailed leg-by-leg instructions with line names, directions, station sequences, and departure/arrival times. Essential for multimodal trip planning, route comparison, accessibility-aware journey selection, and passenger information. AI agents should use this when users ask "how do I get from Paddington to Greenwich", "plan a journey from Heathrow to Tower Bridge", or need door-to-door trip planning across London's transport network. Plan a journey between two locations using TfL transport modes

05

get_line_status

Returns line IDs, line names, status severity (Good Service, Minor Delays, Severe Delays, Part Suspended, Suspended, Planned Work, Special Service), status descriptions, reason codes, and disruption details. Can query all lines system-wide or filter by specific modes (tube, bus, dlr, overground, tram, river, cable-car, elizabeth-line, national-rail). Essential for service disruption awareness, alternative route planning, passenger communication, and understanding overall TfL reliability. AI agents should reference this when users ask "is the Victoria Line running normally", "what is the status of the Overground", or need to check service reliability before planning London journeys. Get current service status for TfL lines, optionally filtered by mode

06

get_modes

Returns modes including tube, bus, dlr, overground, elizabeth-line, tram, river, cable-car, national-rail, and walking. Essential for understanding the scope of TfL's multimodal network, mode identification for filtered queries, and transport network analysis. AI agents should reference this when users ask "what transport modes does TfL cover", "list all available modes", or need to understand the full range of London transport options before planning journeys. List all available transport modes in the TfL network

07

get_place_search

Returns place IDs, names, categories, geographic coordinates, address information, and related links. Can optionally filter by place type (e.g., "TubeStation", "BusStation", "Park", "Museum", "Hospital"). Essential for place discovery, tourist planning, accessibility research, and understanding London's infrastructure. AI agents should use this when users ask "find parks near Westminster", "search for museums in South Bank", or need to identify places and points of interest for comprehensive London trip planning. Search for places and points of interest across London

08

get_road_disruptions

Returns disruption descriptions, affected road segments, cause types (roadworks, incidents, events, utility works), start and end dates, severity levels, and alternative route recommendations. Can query all disruptions system-wide or filter by specific road. Essential for driving disruption awareness, alternative route planning, delivery logistics, and understanding road reliability. AI agents should reference this when users ask "are there any roadworks on the A4", "what disruptions affect my drive to Heathrow", or need to check road conditions before planning driving journeys in London. Get current road disruptions and closures across London

09

get_road_status

Returns road IDs, road names, status descriptions, corridor details, and operational information. Can query all roads system-wide or filter by a specific road ID (e.g., "A1", "A40", "A205" South Circular). Essential for driving route planning, road closure awareness, understanding London road network conditions, and commuter driving decisions. AI agents should use this when users ask "what is the status of the A40", "are there any road closures on the North Circular", or need to check road conditions before driving journeys in London. Get current status of London roads, optionally filtered by specific road

10

get_stop_point_details

Returns stop ID, common name, station type, modes served, geographic coordinates, address, accessibility information (step-free access, lift availability), fare zone, hub station affiliations, and parent/child station relationships. Essential for stop identification, accessibility planning, fare zone awareness, station navigation, and understanding station hierarchy in the TfL network. AI agents should use this when users ask "tell me about King's Cross station", "is this station step-free", or need detailed stop metadata to contextualise transit queries. Get detailed information about a specific TfL stop point

11

get_vehicle_details

Returns vehicle registration, make, model, compliance status, charge exemptions, and registration dates. Essential for London driving compliance checks, ULEZ awareness, congestion charge planning, and vehicle registration verification. AI agents should use this when users ask "check if vehicle AB12 CDE is ULEZ compliant", "is my car exempt from Congestion Charge", or need to verify vehicle compliance before driving in central London. Get vehicle details for a registered vehicle in London (ULEZ/congestion charge)

12

search_stop_point

Returns matching stop points with their IDs, common names, modes served (tube, bus, dlr, overground, tram, river, cable-car, elizabeth-line), geographic coordinates (lat/lon), and station hierarchy information. Can optionally filter by transport mode. Essential for stop discovery, journey planning interfaces, stop identification, and building location-based transit features. AI agents should use this when users ask "find the tube station near Covent Garden", "search for stops called Victoria", or need to identify stop IDs for use in arrival queries. Search for TfL stop points by name or location

Example Prompts for TfL in Claude Code

Ready-to-use prompts you can give your Claude Code agent to start working with TfL immediately.

01

"When is the next Northern Line train arriving at Bank station?"

02

"How many Santander Cycles are available near Hyde Park Corner?"

03

"What is the status of the Victoria Line and Jubilee Line right now?"

Troubleshooting TfL MCP Server with Claude Code

Common issues when connecting TfL to Claude Code through the Vinkius, and how to resolve them.

01

Command not found: claude

Ensure Claude Code is installed globally: npm install -g @anthropic-ai/claude-code
02

Connection timeout

Check your internet connection and verify the Edge URL is reachable

TfL + Claude Code FAQ

Common questions about integrating TfL MCP Server with Claude Code.

01

How do I add an MCP server to Claude Code?

Run claude mcp add --transport http "" in your terminal. Claude Code registers the server and discovers all tools immediately.
02

Can Claude Code run MCP tools in headless mode?

Yes. Claude Code supports non-interactive execution, making it ideal for scripts, cron jobs, and CI/CD pipelines that need MCP tool access.
03

How do I list all connected MCP servers?

Run claude mcp in your terminal to see all registered servers and their status, or type /mcp inside an active Claude Code session.

Connect TfL to Claude Code

Get your token, paste the configuration, and start using 12 tools in under 2 minutes. No API key management needed.