Opera’s agentic web browser, Opera Neon, now fully supports Model Context Protocol (MCP), allowing it to act as an MCP server for other AI clients.
“What this means in practice is that your own AI systems (not provided by Opera) that ‘speak’ MCP can connect to your live browser session, access your real-time web context, and even perform tasks in your browser,” Opera’s Santiago Benavides García writes. “So yes, your Opera Neon can now be controlled by your AI of choice. Even as AI tools become incredibly smart, most still hit a wall because they are disconnected from where your actual work happens. While Neon’s built-in AI already solved this natively, external clients like Claude Code still forced you to be the manual interpreter.”
With this addition, MCP-aware AI chatbots—which is pretty much all of them—can now interact directly with Opera Neon and whatever content you’re viewing, so you no longer have to copy and paste or take screenshots to move information between the two. Opera uses Claude Code as an example, noting that it can now click around in Neon, take screenshots, and analyze webpages you’re viewing and then take action. It also explicitly works with Lovable, which can create UIs, and N8n, an AI automation tool, and you can add any MCP-compatible AI agent or tool as needed.
Opera Neon is the first major web browser to provide MCP server support, Opera notes, and this addition makes it an interesting choice for those developing web apps or sites, especially.