This article is for admins of professional plans.
The Dashlane MCP server makes Dashlane activity logs available through the Model Context Protocol (MCP), allowing AI agents to query activity in a controlled, read-only way.
The MCP server gives you a new access to Dashlane data collection that is built for AI-driven workflows.
What's an MCP server?
A Model Context Protocol (MCP) server helps your AI agent to securely interact with Dashlane. It presents a clear list of actions the assistant is allowed to perform, then return the results in a consistent format. This makes AI agents more reliable, easier to control, and able to use the most up‑to‑date information from your activity logs.
Learn more about activity logs
Why use an MCP server?
Through the Dashlane MCP server, you can:
- Ask questions in plain language instead of crafting complex queries
- Quickly check risks and incidents by timeframe, user, or event type
- Correlate Dashlane activity with other security signals
- Automate recurring audit and compliance checks
- Summarize recent admin, sharing, and credential activity
- Detect anomalies such as unusual spikes in password changes
- Produce user-friendly summaries for security reviews or audits
- Feed SIEM platforms with AI copilots, such as Splunk AI
How to set up an MCP server?
You can get the MCP server running in a few minutes with the Dashlane CLI and a set of CLI keys.
- Install the Dashlane CLI
- Install the MCP server runtime
- Register the MCP server with your AI agent
Step-by-step instructions are available in our GitHub repository
If you have feedback on the MCP server or our CLI, check out our CLI discussions on GitHub
To learn more, check out our blog post on the Dashlane MCP Server