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joshuachestang

Eventbrite MCP Server

MCP Server

Chat‑powered Eventbrite event management

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Updated May 30, 2025

About

An MCP server that lets you create, list, update, publish, and cancel Eventbrite events using natural language commands. It also supports venue creation and category browsing.

Capabilities

Resources
Access data sources
Tools
Execute functions
Prompts
Pre-built templates
Sampling
AI model interactions

Eventbrite MCP Server

The Eventbrite MCP Server bridges the gap between conversational AI assistants and the Eventbrite event‑management platform. By exposing a set of well‑defined tools that mirror core Eventbrite actions—such as creating, updating, and publishing events—it allows developers to let AI assistants orchestrate event workflows entirely through natural language. This eliminates the need for manual API calls or UI interactions, making it possible to script complex event‑management scenarios in a single conversation.

Developers using AI assistants benefit from the server’s ability to translate human intent into precise API calls. For example, a user can simply say “Schedule a webinar on next Tuesday at 3 PM” and the assistant will automatically populate all required fields, choose a venue if needed, and publish the event. The server’s tools encapsulate the intricacies of Eventbrite’s JSON schema, handling authentication, data validation, and error reporting behind the scenes. This streamlines development by reducing boilerplate code and allowing teams to focus on higher‑level business logic.

Key capabilities include:

  • Event lifecycle management: Create, list, update, publish, and cancel events with a single function call.
  • Venue handling: Create new venues or reference existing ones, supporting both online and in‑person events.
  • Category browsing: Retrieve Eventbrite categories to ensure events are filed correctly and discoverable.
  • Rich filtering: List events with status, ordering, and pagination parameters, enabling targeted queries.
  • Extensible parameter set: Each tool accepts a comprehensive list of attributes (e.g., capacity, timezone, currency) so that the assistant can produce fully‑featured events without additional prompts.

Typical use cases span event planners, marketing teams, and community managers who need to keep multiple events in sync across calendars. An AI assistant can act as a virtual event coordinator: it can draft events from email summaries, adjust dates based on venue availability, or cancel duplicate listings—all while maintaining consistent branding and compliance with organizational policies.

Integration into AI workflows is straightforward: once the server is running, any MCP‑compliant client (such as Claude Desktop) can add it to its configuration. The assistant then exposes the tools as part of its knowledge base, enabling users to invoke them through natural language or structured prompts. Because the server handles authentication and request formatting, developers can focus on crafting conversational flows rather than managing API tokens or parsing responses.

In summary, the Eventbrite MCP Server turns Eventbrite’s RESTful interface into a conversational resource. It empowers AI assistants to act as full‑fledged event managers, reducing manual effort, minimizing errors, and accelerating time to market for events of all sizes.