iDenfy Launches MCP Server to Speed Up KYC, KYB, and AML Integrations
Developers can use ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Cursor, and other AI assistants to access iDenfy’s live documentation, generate implementation help, and troubleshoot integrations faster.
LONDON, United Kingdom (April 14, 2026) — iDenfy, an identity verification and fraud prevention platform, today launched its official Model Context Protocol (MCP) server. The new tool lets developers connect iDenfy’s full documentation directly to AI assistants like ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Cursor, Perplexity, and other AI assistants. Once connected, the assistant reads iDenfy’s technical documentation before answering any question – so developers get accurate API field names, current endpoints, and working code examples without ever leaving their chat or code editor.
Most identity verification integrations get stuck on the same step: someone has to read the documentation. AI assistants help, but they often rely on training data that’s months or years old. They guess parameter names, suggest endpoints that no longer exist, and point developers to outdated code. The result is wasted time and broken integrations – and developers end up jumping between an editor and a browser tab anyway.
What the iDenfy MCP Server Does
Model Context Protocol is an open standard, released by Anthropic in late 2024 and quickly adopted by OpenAI, Google, and other AI companies. It lets AI assistants pull in external tools and data sources on demand – the closest thing the AI ecosystem has to a USB port.
With iDenfy’s MCP server, developers can ask their AI assistant any question about iDenfy’s products in plain language. The assistant searches the live documentation, reads the right pages, and returns answers that match iDenfy’s actual API. The server covers every product on the platform.
With the MCP server connected, developers can:
- Generate working integration code. “Write a Python script that creates an identity verification session with name and date-of-birth matching, checks proof of address, and verifies the webhook signature.”
- Debug their setup. “My webhook handler returns 403 for every iDenfy request. What are the common reasons for a signature mismatch?”
- Answer compliance questions. “Implement an integration on my WordPress website that screens every newly registered user through the iDenfy AML tool. The screening must check for negative news, sanctions exposure, and politically exposed person (PEP) status.”
“Developers don’t want to read 50 pages of documentation to find out the name of one field,” says Domantas Ciulde, CEO at iDenfy. “They want to ask a question in the tool they’re already using — ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini — and get an answer that actually works. The MCP server makes that possible. The assistant reads our real docs, so the code it writes uses our real API. No more guessing.”
Works With Every Major AI Assistant
The iDenfy MCP server runs online — there is nothing to install on a developer’s machine. They simply point their assistant at iDenfy’s server URL: https://documentation.idenfy.com/mcp
Safe by Design
The iDenfy MCP server is read-only and only serves public documentation. It does not have access to a developer’s dashboard, sessions, API keys, or customer data. It does not make API calls on anyone’s behalf, and it does not see verification results. Developers retain full control over what they share with their AI assistant provider.
“We serve over 1,000 companies, and every one of those integrations starts with a developer reading documentation,” Ciulde adds. “We wanted that step to take minutes instead of days. The MCP server is the simplest way we found to do that. It’s free, it’s online, and it works with every major AI assistant on the market today.”
The iDenfy MCP server is available now and free for all developers. Full setup instructions for each AI assistant can be found at https://documentation.idenfy.com/resources/mcp. For more information about iDenfy’s identity verification, business verification, and AML products, visit www.idenfy.com.