BitGo Launches MCP Server for AI-Driven Crypto Access
- Stacey George
- March 23, 2026
- Technology
- 0 Comments
BitGo, one of the largest institutional crypto custodians, has launched an MCP Server that allows AI agents to interact with its wallet and custody infrastructure using natural language commands. The move positions BitGo at the intersection of two fast-converging industries: autonomous AI agents and digital asset management.
How BitGo’s MCP Server Connects AI Agents to Crypto Infrastructure
The MCP Server is built on the Model Context Protocol, an open standard originally developed by Anthropic and released as open-source in November 2024. MCP defines a universal interface that lets AI agents call external tools, query data, and execute actions through standardized tool calls rather than custom API integrations.
MCP Protocol milestone
Nov 2024
Anthropic open-sourced the Model Context Protocol, enabling services like BitGo to expose crypto infrastructure directly to AI agents via standardised tool calls.
By deploying an MCP Server, BitGo exposes core services, including wallet creation, transaction signing, custody queries, and balance checks, to any AI client that supports the protocol. Instead of writing custom code against BitGo’s developer API, an AI agent can request operations in plain language through the MCP layer.
The practical effect: developers building AI-powered financial tools can integrate institutional-grade custody without deep API plumbing. An agent can check balances, initiate transfers, or query custody status as naturally as it would answer a text prompt.
BitGo by the numbers
$100B+
Assets under custody across 1,500+ institutional clients and 50+ blockchains, now accessible to AI agents via the new MCP Server.
What AI-Powered Crypto Custody Means for NFT and Digital Asset Owners
BitGo already serves as a custody backbone for institutional digital asset platforms, including those handling NFTs and tokenized assets. With MCP access, AI agents could manage NFT portfolios, automate royalty distributions, or execute batch transfers across collections on behalf of creators and platforms.
Consider a creator managing hundreds of ERC-721 or ERC-1155 assets across multiple wallets. An AI agent connected to BitGo’s custody layer could monitor floor prices, trigger transfers based on predefined rules, or reconcile royalty payments, all without manual intervention. This mirrors the broader shift toward open agentic commerce that is reshaping how digital businesses operate.
The deeper question for NFT and digital asset owners is one of control. When an AI agent has programmatic access to institutional-grade wallets, the lines around digital property rights shift. Who authorizes an irreversible transfer? What guardrails prevent an autonomous agent from executing a trade the owner did not intend?
These are not hypothetical concerns. The trend toward AI agents managing on-chain assets autonomously, through smart accounts and agent wallets, is accelerating. BitGo’s MCP integration brings institutional custody into that conversation, potentially offering stronger security guarantees than self-custody setups where agents hold private keys directly.
For NFT marketplaces and creator platforms, the implications extend to operational efficiency. Automated collection management, programmable royalty splits, and AI-assisted portfolio rebalancing become viable when the custody layer speaks the same protocol as the AI agent layer.
MCP Adoption Is Accelerating Across the Crypto Stack
BitGo is not building in isolation. The Model Context Protocol ecosystem has grown rapidly since its open-source release, with multiple crypto and fintech providers exploring or shipping MCP integrations. Coinbase and several DeFi protocols have signaled interest in standardized AI agent interfaces.
MCP is an open standard, not proprietary to BitGo or Anthropic. Any service can implement an MCP Server, and any compatible AI client can connect to it. This interoperability is what makes the protocol significant: it creates a shared infrastructure layer rather than locking agents into vendor-specific APIs.
The trajectory points toward a broader crypto infrastructure stack where AI agents interact with custody, trading, and on-chain services through a common protocol. For the NFT and digital ownership space, this could mean AI-powered creator tools that seamlessly move assets between custody providers, marketplaces, and on-chain contracts.
What comes next will likely depend on how quickly regulated custody providers adopt the standard and whether compliance frameworks can keep pace with autonomous agent capabilities. BitGo’s early move suggests that institutional players see AI agent integration not as experimental, but as core infrastructure.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.