This document provides security considerations for the Model Context Protocol (MCP), complementing the MCP Authorization specification. This document identifies security risks, attack vectors, and best practices specific to MCP implementations.
The primary audience for this document includes developers implementing MCP authorization flows, MCP server operators, and security professionals evaluating MCP-based systems. This document should be read alongside the MCP Authorization specification and OAuth 2.0 security best practices.
This section gives a detailed description of attacks on MCP implementations, along with potential countermeasures.
Attackers can exploit MCP servers proxying other resource servers, creating “confused deputy” vulnerabilities.
MCP Proxy Server : An MCP server that connects MCP clients to third-party APIs, offering MCP features while delegating operations and acting as a single OAuth client to the third-party API server.
Third-Party Authorization Server : Authorization server that protects the third-party API. It may lack dynamic client registration support, requiring MCP proxy to use a static client ID for all requests.
Third-Party API : The protected resource server that provides the actual API functionality. Access to this API requires tokens issued by the third-party authorization server.
Static Client ID : A fixed OAuth 2.0 client identifier used by the MCP proxy server when communicating with the third-party authorization server. This Client ID refers to the MCP server acting as a client to the Third-Party API. It is the same value for all MCP server to Third-Party API interactions regardless of which MCP client initiated the request.
When an MCP proxy server uses a static client ID to authenticate with a third-party authorization server that does not support dynamic client registration, the following attack becomes possible:
MCP proxy servers using static client IDs MUST obtain user consent for each dynamically registered client before forwarding to third-party authorization servers (which may require additional consent).
“Token passthrough” is an anti-pattern where an MCP server accepts tokens from an MCP client without validating that the tokens were properly issued to the MCP server and “passing them through” to the downstream API.
Token passthrough is explicitly forbidden in the authorization specification as it introduces a number of security risks, that include:
MCP servers MUST NOT accept any tokens that were not explicitly issued for the MCP server.
Session hijacking is an attack vector where a client is provided a session ID by the server, and an unauthorized party is able to obtain and use that same session ID to impersonate the original client and perform unauthorized actions on their behalf.
When you have multiple stateful HTTP servers that handle MCP requests, the following attack vectors are possible:
Session Hijack Prompt Injection
The client connects to Server A and receives a session ID.
The attacker obtains an existing session ID and sends a malicious event to Server B with said session ID.
notifications/tools/list_changed
, where it is possible to affect the tools that are offered by the server, a client could end up with tools that they were not aware were enabled.Server B enqueues the event (associated with session ID) into a shared queue.
Server A polls the queue for events using the session ID and retrieves the malicious payload.
Server A sends the malicious payload to the client as an asynchronous or resumed response.
The client receives and acts on the malicious payload, leading to potential compromise.
Session Hijack Impersonation
To prevent session hijacking and event injection attacks, the following mitigations should be implemented:
MCP servers that implement authorization MUST verify all inbound requests. MCP Servers MUST NOT use sessions for authentication.
MCP servers MUST use secure, non-deterministic session IDs. Generated session IDs (e.g., UUIDs) SHOULD use secure random number generators. Avoid predictable or sequential session identifiers that could be guessed by an attacker. Rotating or expiring session IDs can also reduce the risk.
MCP servers SHOULD bind session IDs to user-specific information.
When storing or transmitting session-related data (e.g., in a queue), combine the session ID with information unique to the authorized user, such as their internal user ID. Use a key format like <user_id>:<session_id>
. This ensures that even if an attacker guesses a session ID, they cannot impersonate another user as the user ID is derived from the user token and not provided by the client.
MCP servers can optionally leverage additional unique identifiers.