Best Productivity MCP servers
Productivity MCP servers connect an agent to the tools where teams actually plan, discuss, and document work: docs and wikis, issue trackers, and chat. With them, an agent can answer questions over internal knowledge, file and update issues, summarize conversations, and keep records current as decisions get made, rather than living in isolation from where the work happens. When choosing, the biggest factors are how the server authenticates and how much it can write. Prefer official servers with OAuth so each user authorizes their own access, and be deliberate about enabling write tools, which many servers leave off by default. Read-mostly setups are the safest starting point; expand write access only once you trust the agent's behavior in your workspace.
7 servers
Notion
Notion
Notion's hosted MCP server lets agents search, read, and write across your workspace over OAuth.
Slack
korotovsky (community)
Community Slack MCP server with smart history, DMs, and search that needs no workspace bot install.
Todoist
Doist
Doist's official Todoist MCP server lets agents create, find, update, and complete tasks, projects, sections, labels, reminders, and goals.
Airtable
Adam Jones (domdomegg)
Maintained Airtable MCP server: let an agent inspect base schemas, then read, search, and write records, tables, fields, and comments.
Linear
Linear
Linear's official remote MCP server lets agents create, search, and update issues and projects.
ClickUp
ClickUp
ClickUp's official remote MCP server lets agents manage tasks, lists, folders, docs, time tracking, and chat across a workspace.
Trello
Jarad DeLorenzo
Maintained Trello MCP server: full board, list, card, checklist, label, member, and attachment management across boards and workspaces.