Connect Microsoft 365 apps to manage email, calendars, Teams, and files.
This MCP tool claims to connect to Microsoft 365 services and therefore may access sensitive enterprise data such as email, calendar, Teams, and OneDrive. However, the provided materials lack README details, authentication flow, and permission scope, so it should be used with caution; being open-source under MIT and not declaring extra remote endpoints lowers the risk, with no clear red flags for a high-risk rating from the provided facts alone.
The material says there are no required keys/environment variables, but connecting to Microsoft 365 via Microsoft Graph API would normally still require some form of Microsoft account or OAuth authorization. The authentication method, token storage, and least-privilege scope are not described, so credential handling remains unclear and warrants caution.
The description explicitly says it connects to Microsoft 365 through Microsoft Graph API, which implies user requests and related email, file, or calendar data may be sent to Microsoft services. Although the 'remote endpoint host' field is empty and there is no evidence of unrelated third-party exfiltration, network egress is inherent to its stated function and should be treated with caution.
The system flags this tool as executes-code, meaning it runs a local service process or related code on the host. The provided material does not show requests for unusual system privileges or clearly state arbitrary external command execution, so this falls under normal MCP execution capability and merits caution rather than a higher rating.
It claims access to Microsoft 365 resources including Email, Calendar, Teams, and OneDrive, which may expose sensitive communications, files, and collaboration data. However, the materials do not specify read/write scope, whether modification or deletion is supported, or the exact Graph permission granularity, leaving the data-access boundary unclear.
Positive factors include that the project is open-source under MIT, making source review possible. However, it comes from a third-party registry, shows 0 GitHub stars, has unknown maintenance status, and lacks README details in the provided material, which reduces verifiability and maturity; source and dependency review is advisable before deployment.
Copy the install command and let the AI configure it · recommended for beginners
No copy-paste install info for "Office MCP Server" yet — see the docs or source repo.
Connect to my Microsoft 365 account and summarize today’s calendar events, important unread emails, and Teams mentions, then create a priority-based task list.
A summary of today’s meetings, key messages, and a prioritized to-do list.
Find documents related to “Q3 product launch” in OneDrive and relevant team spaces, categorize them by type, and list the most recently updated files with links.
A categorized file list with update times and accessible links for quick organization.
For my client meeting tomorrow afternoon, gather related emails, past meeting notes, shared files, and Teams conversations, then generate a one-page pre-meeting brief.
A meeting brief including background, key points, risks, and a suggested agenda.
Use natural language to manage Microsoft 365 mail, files, calendars, and collaboration.
Manage Office 365 email, calendars, files, and collaboration tasks with natural language.
Connect to OneDrive to search, create, move, copy, and share files.
Manage Outlook email, calendars, and contacts through Microsoft Graph automation.
Manage a personal Outlook mailbox and calendar with natural language commands.
Connect Outlook mail, calendar, and contacts to automate communication and scheduling.