How to connect Make MCP with Cursor

How to integrate Make MCP with Cursor Cursor is one of the leading AI-powered code editors. It is built to help developers write, understand, and refactor code faster with AI assistance built directly into the editor. And in this guide, I will explain the easiest and most secure way to connect your Make account to Cursor via Composio Connect, so it can get all available Make operations, show supported languages for Make automations, list all timezones used in Make, and more without ever putting your account credentials at risk.

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How to integrate Make MCP with Cursor

Cursor is one of the leading AI-powered code editors. It is built to help developers write, understand, and refactor code faster with AI assistance built directly into the editor.

And in this guide, I will explain the easiest and most secure way to connect your Make account to Cursor via Composio Connect, so it can get all available Make operations, show supported languages for Make automations, list all timezones used in Make, and more without ever putting your account credentials at risk.

Also integrate Make with

Why Composio?

  • 1,000+ SaaS toolkits out of the box. Skip the work of building and maintaining integrations, Composio gives you instant access to a vast catalog of pre-built connectors.
  • One MCP server for every app. Connect any of your applications on demand through a single endpoint, rather than juggling a separate server for each app.
  • Smart, context-aware tool loading. Unlike traditional MCP servers that dump every available tool into the LLM context window, Composio searches for and loads only the tools relevant to the task at hand. A remote CLI workbench lets LLMs compose these tools into workflows for complex automation.

Connect Make to Cursor

Two ways to install — pick whichever you prefer.

1. Install with one click

Click the button below to add Composio to Cursor.

Install in Cursor

2. Or add manually

Add to your Cursor mcp.json

Open .cursor/mcp.json in your project root (or ~/.cursor/mcp.json for global config) and add the following configuration:

bash
{
  "servers": {
    "composio": {
      "type": "http",
      "url": "https://connect.composio.dev/mcp"
    }
  }
}

3. Authorize

Restart Cursor, then click "Connect" next to Composio in MCP Tools settings.

Cursor MCP Tools settings with Connect button next to Composio

A browser window will open to authorize.

Composio authorization browser window

Connect your Make account

Back in Cursor, ask the agent to connect to Make or give it any Make-related task.

For example, ask it to:

  • "Get all available Make operations"
  • "Show supported languages for Make automations"
  • "List all timezones used in Make"

It will prompt you to authenticate and authorize access to Make.

That is it. Composio tools are now available in Cursor, and your Make account is ready to use.

Conclusion

You have successfully connected Make to Cursor using Composio Connect. Your agent can now use Make securely without exposing credentials in prompts or local scripts.

TOOLS

Supported Tools

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

Create Organization

Tool to create a new organization in Make.

Create Password Reset Demand

Tool to create a password reset demand for a user by their email address.

Get Cashier Prices

Tool to retrieve a specific cashier price by its identifier.

Get Cashier Products

Tool to retrieve available cashier products from Make.

Get Current Authorization

Tool to retrieve current authorization details for the authenticated user.

Get Enums Apps Review Statuses

Tool to retrieve available app review statuses in Make.

Get Enums IMT Regions

Tool to retrieve the list of Make regions and their regionId values.

Get Enums IMT Zones

Tool to retrieve available IMT zones in Make.

Get Enums LLM Models

Tool to retrieve available Large Language Models from Make.

Get Enums Module Types

Tool to retrieve available module types in Make.

Get Enums Organization Features

Tool to retrieve available organization features in Make.

Get Enums User API Token Scopes

Tool to retrieve all available API token scopes in Make.

Get Enums User Email Notifications

Tool to retrieve available email notification types for Make users.

Get Enums User Features

Retrieve the list of all existing user features and their descriptions.

Get Enums Variable Types

Tool to retrieve available variable types in Make.

Get Operations

Retrieve daily operations usage for an organization over the past 30 days.

Get Current User

Tool to retrieve information about the current authenticated user.

List Enums Countries

Retrieve all supported countries in Make.

List Enums Languages

Tool to retrieve a list of language codes and names.

List Enums LLM Builtin Tiers

Retrieve all predefined LLM tiers (small, medium, large) with their associated models, providers, and pricing coefficients.

List Enums Locales

Retrieve all supported locales in Make.

List Enums Timezones

Retrieve all supported timezones in Make.

List Organizations

Tool to list organizations the authenticated user belongs to (including organizationId, name, and timezoneId).

List Teams

Tool to list all teams within an organization.

Ping API

Tool to ping the Make API to verify connectivity and service availability.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

With a standalone Make MCP server, the agents and LLMs can only access a fixed set of Make tools tied to that server. However, with the Composio Tool Router, agents can dynamically load tools from Make and many other apps based on the task at hand, all through a single MCP endpoint.

Yes, you can. Cursor fully supports MCP integration. You get structured tool calling, message history handling, and model orchestration while Tool Router takes care of discovering and serving the right Make tools.

Yes, absolutely. You can configure which Make scopes and actions are allowed when connecting your account to Composio. You can also bring your own OAuth credentials or API configuration so you keep full control over what the agent can do.

All sensitive data such as tokens, keys, and configuration is fully encrypted at rest and in transit. Composio is SOC 2 Type 2 compliant and follows strict security practices so your Make data and credentials are handled as safely as possible.

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