Connect AI to Microsoft To Do to create, query, and manage tasks.
This MCP tool is described as interacting with Microsoft To Do via the Microsoft Graph API; the available material is sparse, but it is open source and does not list separate secret configuration. Based on the known facts, the main concerns are its inherent local execution and remote service interaction, plus limited adoption and unclear maintenance, so the overall posture is caution rather than high risk.
The material says no separate environment variables or keys are required, but the declared functionality depends on the Microsoft Graph API, which typically implies Microsoft account sign-in or access tokens. There is no README explaining token acquisition, storage, or protection, so normal credential-handling caution applies, but there is no clear red flag showing abnormal privilege requests.
The description explicitly states that it interacts with Microsoft cloud services through the Microsoft Graph API, so task content and related data will likely be transmitted to Microsoft endpoints during normal use. The material does not list specific hosts, which reduces transparency, but there is no evidence here of exfiltration to unrelated or unknown third-party endpoints.
The system checks indicate that this tool executes code locally / runs a server process, which is a normal capability for MCP tools. The available material does not disclose additional high-risk system abilities such as arbitrary shell access, privilege escalation, or download-and-execute behavior, so caution is warranted but not a high-risk rating.
By its stated function, its data access scope includes Microsoft To Do task data and may involve reading, creating, or updating those items. The material does not describe local file access scope or least-privilege design details; based on current facts, the access appears aligned with the declared purpose, but transparency is limited.
A positive factor is the presence of an auditable open-source repository, which lowers overall risk; however, it comes from a third-party registry, the license is undeclared, community adoption is 0 stars, maintenance status is unknown, and the README is absent, so supply-chain and long-term maintenance confidence are only moderate. There is not enough evidence here to justify a high-risk rating.
Copy the install command and let the AI configure it · recommended for beginners
No copy-paste install info for "Microsoft To Do MCP" yet — see the docs or source repo.
Please connect to Microsoft To Do, review tasks in my 'My Day' list, reorganize them into urgent, important, and deferrable groups, and add a short note suggestion for each item.
A categorized task list, with task notes updated in To Do or suggested for each item.
Based on the following meeting notes, extract actionable items and create tasks in Microsoft To Do with titles, due dates, and priorities: submit the weekly report by tomorrow afternoon; confirm the release plan before Friday; schedule a client follow-up next Monday.
Structured tasks created in To Do with clear titles, dates, and priorities.
Please check all overdue incomplete tasks in my Microsoft To Do, group them by project, and draft a Chinese progress reminder suitable for sending to the team.
A summary of overdue tasks and a ready-to-send progress reminder message.
Manage local todo lists through natural-language creation, updates, and queries.
Manage Todoist tasks, projects, labels, and comments through an MCP server.
Let AI read and manage your todo-tree tasks through MCP.
Use natural language to automate local text, math, and todo tasks.
Connect Outlook mail, calendar, and contacts to automate communication and scheduling.
Manage prioritized todos and view the current task board as Markdown.