How to integrate Airtable MCP with Grok Build

Connect Grok Build to Airtable MCP. Add new contacts from a signup list, create a project tracking table in workspace, and more from your terminal, with authentication handled for you.

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Airtable combines the flexibility of spreadsheets with the power of a database for easy project and data management. Teams use Airtable to organize, track, and collaborate with custom views and automations.

23 Tools6 Triggers

How to integrate Airtable MCP with Grok Build

Grok Build is xAI's terminal coding agent. It runs on Grok 4.5, plans its work before it acts, and can run multiple sub-agents in parallel. It also reads Claude Code's MCP configuration, so any server you already have in a .mcp.json is picked up with no changes.

In this guide, I will show you how to connect your Airtable account to Grok Build through Composio, so it can add new contacts from a signup list, create a project tracking table in workspace, delete outdated records from clients table, and more without leaving the terminal. Composio holds the OAuth tokens for you, and Grok Build only calls the tools you approve.

Also integrate Airtable with

Why use Composio over a standalone MCP server?

  • Read and write access. Composio's Airtable integration lets Grok Build take real actions like creating drafts, sending updates, and labeling records, not just reading data.
  • 1,000+ SaaS toolkits out of the box. One endpoint gives you a full catalog of pre-built connectors, from Gmail and Slack to Notion, Linear, and Salesforce.
  • One MCP server for every app. Wire up a single Composio server instead of maintaining a separate MCP entry for each app.
  • Smart, context-aware tool loading. Grok Build caps how many tools it holds in a single request. Composio loads only the tools a task needs, so you do not spend that budget on tools you are not using.
  • Cross-app automation. Chain actions across apps in one run. Pull a thread, summarize it in Notion, and post the highlights to Slack from a single prompt.

Prerequisites

  • Grok Build installed and signed in. Install with curl -fsSL https://x.ai/cli/install.sh | bash on macOS or Linux, or irm https://x.ai/cli/install.ps1 | iex on Windows PowerShell. On first launch Grok opens a browser to authenticate; for headless or CI use, set an XAI_API_KEY environment variable instead (create the key at console.x.ai).
  • Access to the Airtable account you want to connect.
  • The Composio MCP endpoint. Composio's server is remote and hosted, so there is nothing to run locally and no tunnel to set up.

Step-by-step: Connect Airtable to Grok Build

1. Install and verify Grok Build

Install the CLI, then restart your shell so the grok binary lands on your PATH:

bash
curl -fsSL https://x.ai/cli/install.sh | bash
which grok

On Windows, install with PowerShell instead: irm https://x.ai/cli/install.ps1 | iex. If which grok returns a path, you are set. Grok Build runs on Grok 4.5 by default; you can switch models inside the session with /model <name>.

2. Add the Composio server

Add Composio as a remote HTTP MCP server with the grok mcp add command:

bash
grok mcp add --transport http composio https://connect.composio.dev/mcp

You can also add and manage servers from inside a session. Run /mcps to open the extensions modal on the MCP tab, then add a new server and paste the Composio URL. Added this way, Grok auto-detects the name from the URL and lists the server as connect:

bash
https://connect.composio.dev/mcp
Grok Build /mcps extensions modal listing MCP servers Grok Build adding the Composio MCP server with its URL

Grok also reads Claude Code-style config, so an entry in ~/.grok/config.toml or a project .mcp.json works the same way.

3. Authenticate

Composio uses OAuth. In the /mcps modal, select the Composio server and press i to authenticate (Grok also triggers this browser flow automatically the first time it uses a Composio tool). Click Allow to authorize access. Grok stores the tokens under ~/.grok/mcp_credentials.json, and /mcps shows Composio as connected.

Grok Build prompting to authenticate the Composio MCP server Composio authorization screen with the Allow button for Grok Build

4. Start building

Ask Grok to work with your Airtable account through Composio. On the first Airtable action, Composio prompts you to connect the account through OAuth. Approve the scopes once, and Composio handles token refresh from there.

What you can do after connecting Airtable

  • Add new contacts from a signup list
  • Create a project tracking table in workspace
  • Delete outdated records from clients table
  • Fetch schema for your marketing base

Security + privacy notes (important)

  • Use least-privilege access. Grant only the Airtable scopes you actually need.
  • Review OAuth scopes before approving. Check that the requested scopes match what you expect Composio and Grok Build to do.
  • Keep write actions human-reviewed. Grok Build proposes a plan before it acts. Leave that approval step on for actions like sending messages or editing records.
  • Keep secrets out of version control. Your XAI_API_KEY and any tokens should never be committed. Use environment variables or a secrets manager.
TOOLS & TRIGGERS

Supported Tools and Triggers

Every Airtable action and event your agent gets out of the box.

Create base

Creates a new Airtable base with specified tables and fields within a workspace.

Create Comment

Tool to create a comment on a specific Airtable record.

Create Field

Creates a new field within a specified table in an Airtable base.

Create Record From Natural Language

Creates a new record in an Airtable table from a natural language description.

Create records

Tool to create multiple records (up to 10) in a specified Airtable table.

Create table

Creates a new table within a specified existing Airtable base, allowing definition of its name, description, and field structure.

Delete Comment

Tool to delete a comment from a record in an Airtable table.

Delete multiple records

Tool to delete up to 10 specified records from a table within an Airtable base.

Delete Record

Permanently deletes a specific record from an existing table within an existing Airtable base.

Get Base Schema

Retrieves the detailed schema for a specified Airtable base, including its tables, fields, field types, and configurations, using the `baseId`.

Get Record

Retrieves a specific record from an Airtable table by its record ID.

Get user information

Retrieves information, such as ID and permission scopes, for the currently authenticated Airtable user from the `/meta/whoami` endpoint.

List bases

Retrieves all Airtable bases accessible to the authenticated user, which may include an 'offset' for pagination.

List Comments

Tool to list comments on a specific Airtable record.

List records

Tool to list records from an Airtable table with filtering, sorting, and pagination.

Update Comment

Tool to update an existing comment on a specific Airtable record.

Update Field

Updates a field's name or description in an Airtable table.

Update multiple records

Tool to update up to 10 records in an Airtable table with selective field modifications.

Update multiple records (PUT)

Tool to destructively update multiple records in Airtable using PUT, clearing unspecified fields.

Update record

Modifies specified fields of an existing record in an Airtable base and table; the base, table, and record must exist.

Update record (PUT)

Updates an existing record in an Airtable base using PUT method.

Update Table

Updates the name, description, and/or date dependency settings of a table in Airtable.

Upload attachment

Uploads a file attachment to a specified field in an Airtable record.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

A standalone Airtable MCP server gives Grok Build a fixed set of Airtable tools tied to that one server. The Composio Tool Router lets Grok Build load tools from Airtable and many other apps on demand, based on the task, all through a single endpoint.

Yes. Grok Build ships with native MCP support. Add a server with the grok mcp add command, from the in-session /mcps modal, or by editing ~/.grok/config.toml. It also reads Claude Code-style .mcp.json files, so Grok Build discovers the tools automatically.

Yes. Grok Build has zero-migration compatibility with Claude Code's configuration, so the same Composio server entry works in both without edits.

Tokens, keys, and configuration are encrypted at rest and in transit. Composio is SOC 2 Type 2 compliant, so your Airtable data and credentials are handled to that standard.

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