Webflow MCP. Manage sites, content, and orders with conversation.
Webflow MCP connects your AI client directly to your Webflow account. You manage entire web projects—from listing sites and tracking e-commerce orders to updating CMS collections—all through natural conversation. It lets you keep critical site data, asset management, and user coordination inside your agent workflow without opening the designer or hitting separate dashboards.
Give Claude and any AI agent real-world access
You retrieve a list of all Webflow sites you manage and get detailed metadata for each one.
You can query specific CMS collections and even create new items without ever opening the web designer interface.
The MCP lists recent e-commerce orders, allowing you to track customer transactions instantly.
You get a comprehensive list of all uploaded site assets, like images and files, keeping your media library organized.
The tool manages registered site user accounts and membership status directly through AI commands.
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What AI agents can do with Webflow MCP: 8 Tools for Site Management
These tools let you create, retrieve, and inspect every major piece of data on your Webflow sites, from individual content items to overall site metadata.
Make your AI actually useful.
Add this MCP to Claude, Cursor, or Windsurf and your AI stops guessing. It gets real tools to look things up, take action, and handle the stuff you keep doing by hand.
Start using Webflow MCPCreate Collection Item
Adds a brand new piece of dynamic content to a specified CMS collection.
Get Site Details
Retrieves specific metadata and status information for one Webflow site.
List Site Assets
Generates a complete list of all images, files, and media uploaded to the account.
List Cms Collections
Shows all available content collections on a specific Webflow site.
List Collection Items
Lists all the actual pieces of content (e.g., blog posts, product pages) within a...
List Ecommerce Orders
Pulls a list of recent sales and financial data from the online store.
List Sites
Provides an overview and listing of every Webflow site associated with your account.
List Site Users
Lists all registered members and users who have accounts on the site.
Security and governance baked right in.
Pick your AI client below to get set up. Just create a Vinkius account, subscribe, and you're instantly up and running. We handle the entire backend infrastructure, delivering out-of-the-box support for HTTPS Streamable, SSE, and OAuth2—zero messy routing required.
Choose How to Get Started
Build a custom MCP for your own tools, or connect a ready-made integration from our catalog.
Build Your Own
Turn any API into an MCP. Import a spec, define Agent Skills, or deploy with MCPFusion.
- Import from OpenAPI, Swagger, or YAML specs
- Create Agent Skills with progressive disclosure
- Deploy to edge with MCPFusion framework
- Built in DLP, auth, and compliance on each call
- Real time usage dashboard and cost metering
- Publish to catalog or keep private
Make Your AI Do More
Start with Webflow, then connect any of our 5,200+ other servers whenever your AI needs more. One click, no limits.
- Use this MCP plus 5,200+ others, all in one place
- Add new capabilities to your AI anytime you want
- Connections are secured and governed automatically
- Track usage and costs across all your servers
- Works with Claude, ChatGPT, Cursor, and more
- New servers added to the catalog weekly
Independent Platform Disclaimer: Vinkius is an independent platform and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, sponsored by, verified by, or otherwise authorized by Webflow. All third-party trademarks, logos, and brand names are the property of their respective owners. Their use on this website is strictly for informational purposes to identify service compatibility and interoperability.
VINKIUS CLOUD
Cloud Hosted
Managed infra
V8 Isolated
Sandboxed per request
Zero-Trust Proxy
No stored credentials
DLP Enforced
Policy on each call
GDPR Compliant
EU data residency
Token Compression
~60% cost reduction
The Pain of Webflow Dashboard Hopping
Today, managing a web presence means bouncing between at least four distinct areas: the CMS collection view to check article drafts; the Asset Manager to confirm logo sizes; the Designer viewport to see how things look; and finally, the e-commerce panel to verify sales. Every time you click tabs or navigate menus, you lose momentum.
With this MCP, all that data lives in your chat window. You tell your agent what you need—like listing site assets or checking CMS collections—and the information appears immediately, eliminating the frustrating clicking and copy-pasting process.
List Sites and Manage Content Collections
You no longer have to manually navigate through your Webflow dashboard just to see if you even have a site set up, or where the collections live. You simply ask the agent to list all sites first, then use 'list_cms_collections' to map out your content structure.
The difference is control and speed. Instead of guesswork, you get an immediate, actionable data inventory that lets you start building or fixing without delay.
What Webflow MCP does for your AI
Managing a complex website built in Webflow usually means jumping between multiple tabs: the Designer, the CMS panel, the e-commerce backend, and the asset library. This MCP changes that by bringing all those functions into a single conversation with your AI agent. You simply tell it what you need—for example, 'List the top 5 articles from the Blog' or 'Check for new orders over $100.' Your agent executes the action immediately.
It pulls detailed site metadata and status updates on demand. Whether you're checking if a specific image asset exists or creating a brand-new CMS item, you don't need to learn Webflow's internal API language; you just talk to it. This connection is hosted by Vinkius, meaning your agent can access this powerful set of tools alongside thousands of others, keeping all your web operations centralized and conversational.
019dd186-e141-7166-931f-591e80063ef8 How to set up Webflow MCP
The bottom line is that you interact with complex website functions using simple natural language prompts.
First, subscribe to the Webflow MCP on Vinkius.
Next, input your Webflow API Access Token into the connection settings.
Finally, start asking your AI client questions about your sites—like checking asset status or listing orders—and get real-time data.
Who uses Webflow MCP
This MCP is for anyone whose job involves managing a web presence built in Webflow. If checking CMS data, tracking e-commerce sales, or listing site assets feels like switching between five different dashboards, this is for you.
You use the MCP to list existing items in a collection and create new content entries without needing developer help.
You check site details or verify CMS data configurations during development, ensuring everything is set up correctly before deployment.
You monitor recent orders and customer growth directly through your AI agent without logging into the webflow backend.
Benefits of connecting Webflow MCP
Stop context switching. Instead of opening the CMS panel, then checking assets, then reviewing orders, you ask your agent to do all three in one prompt. It keeps your workflow inside the chat window.
Content updates are instant. Use the MCP to list items or even create a new collection item and get it populated without manually entering data into Webflow's dashboard.
Track sales easily. By listing e-commerce orders, you instantly know if there are pending shipments or customer issues, giving store owners immediate visibility on revenue flow.
Keep track of everything media-related. Listing site assets means you never have to wonder where that logo file is stored; the MCP gives you a definitive inventory.
Developers get quick verification. You can use 'get_site_details' or 'list_collection_items' to verify data points during development, cutting down on manual API testing time.
Webflow MCP use cases
Needing an inventory of all site components
A web developer needs to know if the 'About Us' page has been updated with its latest team members. Instead of clicking into the CMS and browsing every collection, they ask their agent to list items in the relevant collection, verifying the date and names instantly.
Investigating a drop in sales
A store owner notices fewer orders than usual. They prompt the MCP to list e-commerce orders for the last 7 days. The agent returns a detailed count, allowing them to pinpoint if the issue is with payment processing or traffic.
Building out new blog content
A content manager needs to write three new articles but first must confirm the structure. They use 'list_cms_collections' to verify the correct categories exist, then use 'create_collection_item' for a draft post.
Onboarding a new team member
An operations manager needs to ensure all site staff have accounts. They ask their agent to list registered site users and check their membership status, preventing manual backend access.
Webflow MCP tradeoffs
What to watch out for, and the recommended way to handle each one.
Treating the MCP like a search engine
Typing vague questions like 'Tell me about my website stuff' expecting a comprehensive report. The system will fail because it needs specific actions.
Be explicit and use the tool functions. Instead of general queries, prompt: 'List all sites' to start, or 'List e-commerce orders' when you need sales data.
Running multiple API calls manually
Manually calling the Webflow API for site details, then making a separate call for assets, and another for users. This is slow and requires complex scripting.
Ask your agent to combine these actions: 'Give me the sites list, and also check the latest 5 orders.' The MCP handles the sequence of calls in one interaction.
Assuming data access
Expecting the tool to know which site you want data from without specifying it. This leads to ambiguous results or errors.
Always specify the target when possible. For example, 'List items in the Blog Posts collection for site X' instead of just asking about blog posts.
When to use Webflow MCP
Use this MCP if your web workflow involves repetitive data checks across multiple Webflow areas—CMS content, media assets, and sales records. You need a single conversational entry point to manage these operations. Don't use it if you are trying to perform visual design work or build the underlying HTML structure; for that, you still need the Webflow designer itself. If your goal is simply to view the raw code generated by an existing site, there are dedicated front-end coding tools better suited than this data layer MCP. However, if your pain point is 'I spend too much time switching between dashboards just to gather information,' then this MCP's ability to list sites and fetch e-commerce orders conversationally is exactly what you need.
Frequently asked questions about Webflow MCP
How do I use the Webflow MCP to list all my sites? +
You prompt your agent to 'list all Webflow sites.' The tool executes 'list_sites' and gives you a clear inventory of every site associated with your account.
Can I use the Webflow MCP to create new blog posts? +
Yes. You can use the 'create_collection_item' tool, which allows your agent to draft and populate a brand-new CMS item directly for you.
Does the Webflow MCP help with e-commerce tracking? +
Absolutely. Simply ask to list recent orders; the MCP runs 'list_ecommerce_orders' to pull up detailed transaction data immediately.
What if I need to check a specific site's details using Webflow MCP? +
Use the 'get_site_details' tool. You just provide the required identifier, and the agent fetches all relevant metadata for that single site.
Is managing user accounts part of the Webflow MCP? +
Yes, you can manage users by asking to list registered site users. The 'list_site_users' tool provides a clear roster of who has access.