Access Google Search Console data and site performance through a unified API.
The materials are sparse, but the tool is described as interacting with Google Search Console services and is flagged as executing code. It is open-source under MIT, which improves auditability, but the missing README, zero stars, and unknown maintenance make it a caution-level tool rather than high risk.
The materials state there are no required keys or environment variables, but a tool that interacts with Google Search Console would typically require some form of Google authentication in practice. The authentication path is undocumented, which warrants caution, though no explicit credential-abuse red flag is shown.
The description indicates interaction with Google Search Console tools and services, so network communication is expected by function. Although no remote host is listed in the objective checks, the documentation does not specify endpoints, transmitted data, or scope; transparency is limited, but there is no evidence of exfiltration to unrelated or unknown endpoints.
The system flags this tool as executes-code, meaning it runs code/processes locally; this is a normal capability for this class of tool. The provided materials do not show requests for system privileges beyond its stated purpose, nor any concrete signs of command-execution abuse.
By function, the tool may access data related to Google Search Console, but the missing README leaves unclear which local files, caches, or remote resources it reads or writes, and whether permissions are minimized. The current materials are insufficient to conclude overreach, but the data-access boundary is unclear.
Positive factors include public source code and an MIT license, which support auditing. However, the source is a third-party registry entry, the repository has 0 stars, maintenance is unknown, and documentation is nearly absent, which reduces trust and verifiability. Overall, this is an auditable but low-maturity supply-chain case that warrants caution.
Copy the install command and let the AI configure it · recommended for beginners
No copy-paste install info for "Google SearchConsole MCP Server" yet — see the docs or source repo.
Using the Google SearchConsole MCP Server, fetch website search query data from the last 28 days, rank by clicks and impressions, identify the top 20 keywords, and summarize optimization opportunities.
A ranked keyword performance list with high-potential queries and content optimization recommendations.
Use the Google SearchConsole MCP Server to check the indexing status of key pages under https://example.com/blog/, list pages that are not indexed or have crawl issues, and explain possible causes.
A report showing indexing results, problematic pages, and possible reasons for each issue.
Using the Google SearchConsole MCP Server, compare this week versus last week for organic clicks, impressions, CTR, and average position, then generate a concise weekly report.
A weekly report with key metric changes, trend summaries, and highlights for important pages.
Connect Google Search Console to query performance, inspect URLs, and manage sitemaps.
Connect to Google Search Console via MCP for SEO analytics and site management.
Query Google Search Console data, inspect URLs, and manage sitemaps in natural language.
Query multiple Google Search Console accounts in one AI session.
Monitor search performance, indexing, sitemaps, and SEO issues for websites.
Access Google Search Console data for performance, indexation, and SEO diagnostics.