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Discover and install prebuilt plugins through marketplaces

> ## Documentation Index > Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://code.claude.com/docs/llms.txt > Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

Claude Code Knowledge Pack7/10/2026

Overview

Documentation Index

Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://code.claude.com/docs/llms.txt Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

Discover and install prebuilt plugins through marketplaces

Find and install plugins from marketplaces to extend Claude Code with new skills, agents, and capabilities.

Plugins extend Claude Code with skills, agents, hooks, and MCP servers. Plugin marketplaces are catalogs that help you discover and install these extensions without building them yourself.

Looking to create and distribute your own marketplace? See Create and distribute a plugin marketplace.

How marketplaces work

A marketplace is a catalog of plugins that someone else has created and shared. Using a marketplace is a two-step process:

This registers the catalog with Claude Code so you can browse what's available. No plugins are installed yet.



Browse the catalog and install the plugins you want.

Think of it like adding an app store: adding the store gives you access to browse its collection, but you still choose which apps to download individually.

Official Anthropic marketplace

The official Anthropic marketplace (claude-plugins-official) is automatically available when you start Claude Code. Run /plugin and go to the Discover tab to browse what's available, or view the catalog at claude.com/plugins.

To install a plugin from the official marketplace, use /plugin install <name>@claude-plugins-official. For example, to install the GitHub integration:

/plugin install github@claude-plugins-official

If Claude Code reports that the plugin is not found in any marketplace, your marketplace is either missing or outdated. Run /plugin marketplace update claude-plugins-official to refresh it, or /plugin marketplace add anthropics/claude-plugins-official if you haven't added it before. Then retry the install.

The official marketplace is maintained by Anthropic. To submit a plugin to the official marketplace, use one of the in-app submission forms:

To distribute plugins independently, create your own marketplace and share it with users.

The official marketplace includes several categories of plugins:

Code intelligence

Code intelligence plugins enable Claude Code's built-in LSP tool, giving Claude the ability to jump to definitions, find references, and see type errors immediately after edits. These plugins configure Language Server Protocol connections, the same technology that powers VS Code's code intelligence.

These plugins require the language server binary to be installed on your system. If you already have a language server installed, Claude may prompt you to install the corresponding plugin when you open a project.

LanguagePluginBinary required
C/C++clangd-lspclangd
C#csharp-lspcsharp-ls
Gogopls-lspgopls
Javajdtls-lspjdtls
Kotlinkotlin-lspkotlin-language-server
Lualua-lsplua-language-server
PHPphp-lspintelephense
Pythonpyright-lsppyright-langserver
Rustrust-analyzer-lsprust-analyzer
Swiftswift-lspsourcekit-lsp
TypeScripttypescript-lsptypescript-language-server

You can also create your own LSP plugin for other languages.

If you see Executable not found in $PATH in the /plugin Errors tab after installing a plugin, install the required binary from the table above.

What Claude gains from code intelligence plugins

Once a code intelligence plugin is installed and its language server binary is available, Claude gains two capabilities:

  • Automatic diagnostics: after every file edit Claude makes, the language server analyzes the changes and reports errors and warnings back automatically. Claude sees type errors, missing imports, and syntax issues without needing to run a compiler or linter. If Claude introduces an error, it notices and fixes the issue in the same turn. This requires no configuration beyond installing the plugin. You can see diagnostics inline by pressing Ctrl+O when the "diagnostics found" indicator appears.
  • Code navigation: Claude can use the language server to jump to definitions, find references, get type info on hover, list symbols, find implementations, and trace call hierarchies. These operations give Claude more precise navigation than grep-based search, though availability may vary by language and environment.

If you run into issues, see Code intelligence troubleshooting.

External integrations

These plugins bundle pre-configured MCP servers so you can connect Claude to external services without manual setup:

  • Source control: github, gitlab
  • Project management: atlassian (Jira/Confluence), asana, linear, notion
  • Design: figma
  • Infrastructure: vercel, firebase, supabase
  • Communication: slack
  • Monitoring: sentry

Development workflows

Plugins that add skills and agents for common development tasks:

  • commit-commands: Git commit workflows including commit, push, and PR creation
  • pr-review-toolkit: Specialized agents for reviewing pull requests
  • agent-sdk-dev: Tools for building with the Claude Agent SDK
  • plugin-dev: Toolkit for creating your own plugins

Output styles

Customize how Claude responds:

  • explanatory-output-style: Educational insights about implementation choices
  • learning-output-style: Interactive learning mode for skill building

Try it: add the demo marketplace

Anthropic also maintains a demo plugins marketplace (claude-code-plugins) with example plugins that show what's possible with the plugin system. Unlike the official marketplace, you need to add this one manually.

From within Claude Code, run the `plugin marketplace add` command for the `anthropics/claude-code` marketplace:

```shell theme={null}
/plugin marketplace add anthropics/claude-code
```

This downloads the marketplace catalog and makes its plugins available to you.



Run `/plugin` to open the plugin manager. This opens a tabbed interface with four tabs you can cycle through using **Tab** (or **Shift+Tab** to go backward):

* **Discover**: browse available plugins from all your marketplaces
* **Installed**: view and manage your installed plugins
* **Marketplaces**: add, remove, or update your added marketplaces
* **Errors**: view any plugin loading errors

Go to the **Discover** tab to see plugins from the marketplace you just added.



Select a plugin to view its details, then choose an installation scope:

* **User scope**: install for yourself across all projects
* **Project scope**: install for all collaborators on this repository
* **Local scope**: install for yourself in this repository only

For example, select **commit-commands** (a plugin that adds git workflow skills) and install it to your user scope.

You can also install directly from the command line:

```shell theme={null}
/plugin install commit-commands@anthropics-claude-code
```

See [Configuration scopes](/en/settings#configuration-scopes) to learn more about scopes.



After installing, run `/reload-plugins` to activate the plugin. Plugin skills are namespaced by the plugin name, so **commit-commands** provides skills like `/commit-commands:commit`.

Try it out by making a change to a file and running:

```shell theme={null}
/commit-commands:commit
```

This stages your changes, generates a commit message, and creates the commit.

Each plugin works differently. Check the plugin's description in the **Discover** tab or its homepage to learn what skills and capabilities it provides.

The rest of this guide covers all the ways you can add marketplaces, install plugins, and manage your configuration.

Add marketplaces

Use the /plugin marketplace add command to add marketplaces from different sources.

Shortcuts: You can use /plugin market instead of /plugin marketplace, and rm instead of remove.

  • GitHub repositories: owner/repo format (for example, anthropics/claude-code)
  • Git URLs: any git repository URL (GitLab, Bitbucket, self-hosted)
  • Local paths: directories or direct paths to marketplace.json files
  • Remote URLs: direct URLs to hosted marketplace.json files

Add from GitHub

Add a GitHub repository that contains a .claude-plugin/marketplace.json file using the owner/repo format—where owner is the GitHub username or organization and repo is the repository name.

For example, anthropics/claude-code refers to the claude-code repository owned by anthropics:

/plugin marketplace add anthropics/claude-code

Add from other Git hosts

Add any git repository by providing the full URL. This works with any Git host, including GitLab, Bitbucket, and self-hosted servers:

Using HTTPS:

/plugin marketplace add https://gitlab.com/company/plugins.git

Using SSH:

/plugin marketplace add git@gitlab.com:company/plugins.git

To add a specific branch or tag, append # followed by the ref:

/plugin marketplace add https://gitlab.com/company/plugins.git#v1.0.0

Add from local paths

Add a local directory that contains a .claude-plugin/marketplace.json file:

/plugin marketplace add ./my-marketplace

You can also add a direct path to a marketplace.json file:

/plugin marketplace add ./path/to/marketplace.json

Add from remote URLs

Add a remote marketplace.json file via URL:

/plugin marketplace add https://example.com/marketplace.json

URL-based marketplaces have some limitations compared to Git-based marketplaces. If you encounter "path not found" errors when installing plugins, see Troubleshooting.

Install plugins

Once you've added marketplaces, you can install plugins directly (installs to user scope by default):

/plugin install plugin-name@marketplace-name

To choose a different installation scope, use the interactive UI: run /plugin, go to the Discover tab, and press Enter on a plugin. You'll see options for:

  • User scope (default): install for yourself across all projects
  • Project scope: install for all collaborators on this repository (adds to .claude/settings.json)
  • Local scope: install for yourself in this repository only (not shared with collaborators)

You may also see plugins with managed scope—these are installed by administrators via managed settings and cannot be modified.

Make sure you trust a plugin before installing it. Anthropic does not control what MCP servers, files, or other software are included in plugins and cannot verify that they work as intended. Check each plugin's homepage for more information.

Manage installed plugins

Run /plugin and go to the Installed tab to view, enable, disable, or uninstall your plugins. The list is grouped by scope and sorted so you see problems first: plugins with load errors or unresolved dependencies appear at the top, followed by your favorites, with disabled plugins folded behind a collapsed header at the bottom.

From the list you can:

  • press f to favorite or unfavorite the selected plugin
  • type to filter by plugin name or description
  • press Enter to open a plugin's detail view and enable, disable, or uninstall it

When you install a plugin that declares dependencies, the install output lists which dependencies were auto-installed alongside it.

You can also manage plugins with direct commands.

Disable a plugin without uninstalling:

/plugin disable plugin-name@marketplace-name

Re-enable a disabled plugin:

/plugin enable plugin-name@marketplace-name

Completely remove a plugin:

/plugin uninstall plugin-name@marketplace-name

The --scope option lets you target a specific scope with CLI commands:

claude plugin install formatter@your-org --scope project
claude plugin uninstall formatter@your-org --scope project

Apply plugin changes without restarting

When you install, enable, or disable plugins during a session, run /reload-plugins to pick up all changes without restarting:

/reload-plugins

Claude Code reloads all active plugins and shows counts for plugins, skills, agents, hooks, plugin MCP servers, and plugin LSP servers.

Manage marketplaces

You can manage marketplaces through the interactive /plugin interface or with CLI commands.

Use the interactive interface

Run /plugin and go to the Marketplaces tab to:

  • View all your added marketplaces with their sources and status
  • Add new marketplaces
  • Update marketplace listings to fetch the latest plugins
  • Remove marketplaces you no longer need

Use CLI commands

You can also manage marketplaces with direct commands.

List all configured marketplaces:

/plugin marketplace list

Refresh plugin listings from a marketplace:

/plugin marketplace update marketplace-name

Remove a marketplace:

/plugin marketplace remove marketplace-name

Removing a marketplace will uninstall any plugins you installed from it.

Configure auto-updates

Claude Code can automatica