Mercury

by docs

View Mercury business banking accounts in read-only mode — secure, streamlined access for small business fintech users.

Read-only access to Mercury business banking accounts

github stars

Read-only access for securityDirect Mercury bank integration

best for

  • / Business owners tracking finances
  • / Accountants managing client books
  • / Financial analysts building reports

capabilities

  • / Retrieve account balances and details
  • / Query transaction history
  • / Access banking account information
  • / Monitor business cash flow data

what it does

Provides read-only access to Mercury business banking account data through an MCP interface. Allows you to retrieve account balances, transaction history, and banking information programmatically.

about

Mercury is an official MCP server published by docs that provides AI assistants with tools and capabilities via the Model Context Protocol. View Mercury business banking accounts in read-only mode — secure, streamlined access for small business fintech users.

how to install

You can install Mercury in your AI client of choice. Use the install panel on this page to get one-click setup for Cursor, Claude Desktop, VS Code, and other MCP-compatible clients. This server supports remote connections over HTTP, so no local installation is required.

license

MIT

Mercury is released under the MIT license. This is a permissive open-source license, meaning you can freely use, modify, and distribute the software.

FAQ

What is the Mercury MCP server?
Mercury is a Model Context Protocol (MCP) server profile on explainx.ai. MCP lets AI hosts (e.g. Claude Desktop, Cursor) call tools and resources through a standard interface; this page summarizes categories, install hints, and community ratings.
How do MCP servers relate to agent skills?
Skills are reusable instruction packages (often SKILL.md); MCP servers expose live capabilities. Teams frequently combine both—skills for workflows, MCP for APIs and data. See explainx.ai/skills and explainx.ai/mcp-servers for parallel directories.
How are reviews shown for Mercury?
This profile displays 66 aggregated ratings (sample rows for discoverability plus signed-in user reviews). Average score is about 4.6 out of 5—verify behavior in your own environment before production use.
MCP server reviews

Ratings

4.666 reviews
  • Ganesh Mohane· Dec 28, 2024

    We evaluated Mercury against two servers with overlapping tools; this profile had the clearer scope statement.

  • Arjun Verma· Dec 28, 2024

    We wired Mercury into a staging workspace; the listing’s GitHub and npm pointers saved time versus hunting across READMEs.

  • James Ndlovu· Dec 24, 2024

    I recommend Mercury for teams standardizing on MCP; the explainx.ai page compares cleanly with sibling servers.

  • James Perez· Dec 20, 2024

    We evaluated Mercury against two servers with overlapping tools; this profile had the clearer scope statement.

  • Arjun Mehta· Dec 16, 2024

    Mercury is among the better-indexed MCP projects we tried; the explainx.ai summary tracks the official description.

  • Arya Singh· Dec 8, 2024

    Strong directory entry: Mercury surfaces stars and publisher context so we could sanity-check maintenance before adopting.

  • Arjun Tandon· Nov 23, 2024

    Strong directory entry: Mercury surfaces stars and publisher context so we could sanity-check maintenance before adopting.

  • Rahul Santra· Nov 19, 2024

    Useful MCP listing: Mercury is the kind of server we cite when onboarding engineers to host + tool permissions.

  • Tariq Desai· Nov 19, 2024

    According to our notes, Mercury benefits from clear Model Context Protocol framing — fewer ambiguous “AI plugin” claims.

  • Tariq Menon· Nov 11, 2024

    Useful MCP listing: Mercury is the kind of server we cite when onboarding engineers to host + tool permissions.

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