serversSoftwareApplication

Confluence MCP Server

Deploy and configure the Confluence MCP server with authentication, use cases, security notes, and India-ready hosting guidance.

Quick Answer / TL;DR

The Confluence MCP server exposes Confluence capabilities to AI clients through scoped tools, resources, and JSON-RPC calls, using API Key / Token for authentication.

Key Takeaways

  • Authentication: API Key / Token.
  • Category: Productivity.
  • Best first use case: Audit active accounts metrics.
  • Use environment variables and least-privilege scopes for production.

Integration overview

Retrieve corporate technical wikis and documentation pages.

Use this connector when an AI assistant such as Claude, Cursor, or a custom agent needs a governed path into Confluence. Keep the server focused on the approved workflows instead of exposing a whole account or admin surface.

For Indian teams, deploy the connector near the users and the data source, then add request IDs, redaction, and audit logs before connecting production data.

FieldValue
ConnectorConfluence MCP Server
CategoryProductivity
AuthenticationAPI Key / Token
Production route/servers/confluence-mcp-server/

Features and use cases

Confluence is most useful when the agent has a narrow job to complete and the server can validate every argument before execution.

Start with read-only or low-risk tools. Add write operations only after approval prompts, scoped credentials, and logging are working.

CapabilityRecommended guardrail
Read endpointsAllow with scoped read access
Update commandsAllow with scoped read access
Logs diagnosticAllow with scoped read access

Local and hosted configuration

Configure Confluence with credentials stored in environment variables. Do not hardcode tokens in prompts, repositories, screenshots, or browser-visible code.

The local configuration pattern works for a single developer. Hosted deployments should add TLS, bearer-token authentication, health checks, and monitoring.

{
  "mcpServers": {
    "confluence": {
      "command": "npx",
      "args": ["-y", "@modelcontextprotocol/server-confluence"],
      "env": {
        "CONFLUENCE_TOKEN": "${CONFLUENCE_TOKEN}"
      }
    }
  }
}

Security and permissions

Protect API Key / Token credentials with least privilege, rotation, and separate environments for development, staging, and production.

Review every tool output for sensitive data before letting it enter model context. For regulated Indian workflows, add DPDP-aware redaction and retention controls.

{
  "server": "confluence-mcp-server",
  "auth": "API Key / Token",
  "policy": {
    "leastPrivilege": true,
    "redactSecrets": true,
    "requireApprovalForWrites": true,
    "auditToolCalls": true
  }
}

Confluence MCP Server FAQs

Direct answers for developers, operators, and Indian teams evaluating MCP.

M
MCPserver Team

MCP documentation and protocol implementation team

Published: 2026-07-19
Updated: 2026-07-19