Built in collaboration with Anthropic, AWS, GitHub, Google, and Windsurf, Miro’s MCP server helps product and engineering teams align faster and build with greater context
SAN FRANCISCO & AMSTERDAM, February 02, 2026–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Miro®, the AI Innovation Workspace for teams, today announced its Model Context Protocol (MCP) server. Built in collaboration with Anthropic, AWS, GitHub, Google, and Windsurf (a Cognition Company), the MCP server creates bidirectional integration between Miro’s AI Innovation Workspace and AI coding environments to help teams build the right things faster.
Organizations understand that AI can help them move faster. But uncertainty remains around how to ground it in real workflows and decisions so that it’s not just fast, but also accurate. Without shared context, AI outputs remain fragmented, hard to trust, and costly to validate – particularly for teams outside of engineering, such as IT, security, and operations.
Miro’s MCP server connects the shared visual context that teams already create in Miro with AI agents across the organization. Teams can have confidence that AI outputs are grounded in real architectures, real decisions, and real cross-functional understanding.
“The cross-functional context teams create in Miro is critical to unlocking AI value at scale,” said Jeff Chow, Chief Product & Technology Officer at Miro. “When product, design, and engineering align visually on intent and decisions, that shared context can flow into agentic coding systems and back into cross-functional discussions as work evolves. By making this context accessible through MCP, we’re helping organizations realize the full value of their AI investment.”
“Millions of developers use GitHub Copilot for software development and increasingly leveraging agentic workflows, of which MCP servers are incredibly valuable in keeping developers in the flow by giving access to context and tools across systems,” said Simina Pasat, VP of Product at GitHub. “Closer connection with Miro through their MCP integration means engineering teams using GitHub Copilot can better access architectural diagrams, user stories, and design decisions without having to leave their workflow, powering a smarter, faster, and more secure development experience.”
“Miro’s MCP server unlocks a powerful new workflow to go from ideas to apps using Replit,” said Jeff Burke, Head of BD and Partnerships at Replit. “By seamlessly passing context from Miro to Replit, teams can reduce friction and move from concept to execution faster. We’re excited to see how Replit builders use Miro’s MCP server to create tighter feedback loops between thinking and making – and ship products faster as a result.”






