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Slack

The Slack enables tools and to call Slack APIs  on behalf of a .

Want to quickly get started with Slack in your or AI app? The pre-built Arcade Slack MCP Server is what you want!

What’s documented here

This page describes how to use and configure Slack auth with Arcade.

This is used by:

Configuring Slack auth

When using your own app credentials, make sure you configure your to use a custom user verifier. Without this, your end-users will not be able to use your app or in production.

In a production environment, you will most likely want to use your own Slack app credentials. This way, your will see your application’s name requesting permission.

Before showing how to configure your Slack app credentials, let’s go through the steps to create a Slack app.

Create a Slack app

In May 29, 2025, Slack announced  changes to their API rate-limits and terms of service for apps that are not approved for the Slack Marketplace.

The conversations.history and conversations.replies endpoints are now limited to 1 request/minute and up to 15 objects returned per request. This affects various in the Arcade Slack MCP Server. Additionally, the API Terms of Service  now requires Slack Marketplace  approval for commercial distribution.

  • Follow Slack’s guide to registering a Slack app 
  • If you plan to use the Arcade Slack MCP Server, select the scopes below (include additional scopes for your application’s authorization needs or custom , in any):
    • channels:history
    • channels:read
    • chat:write
    • groups:read
    • groups:history
    • groups:write
    • im:history
    • im:read
    • im:write
    • mpim:history
    • mpim:read
    • mpim:write
    • users:read
    • users:read.email
  • Set the redirect URL to the redirect URL generated by Arcade (see below)
  • Copy the client ID and client secret

Next, add the Slack app to Arcade.

Configuring your own Slack Auth Provider in Arcade

Configure Slack Auth Using the Arcade Dashboard GUI

Access the Arcade Dashboard

To access the Arcade Cloud dashboard, go to api.arcade.dev/dashboard . If you are self-hosting, by default the dashboard will be available at http://localhost:9099/dashboard . Adjust the host and port number to match your environment.

  • Under the OAuth section of the Arcade Dashboard left-side menu, click Providers.
  • Click Add OAuth Provider in the top right corner.
  • Select the Included Providers tab at the top.
  • In the Provider dropdown, select Slack.

Enter the provider details

  • Choose a unique ID for your provider (e.g. “my-slack-provider”).
  • Optionally enter a Description.
  • Enter the Client ID and Client Secret from your Slack app.
  • Note the Redirect URL generated by Arcade. This must be set as your Slack app’s redirect URL.

Create the provider

Hit the Create button and the provider will be ready to be used.

When you use tools that require Slack auth using your Arcade credentials, Arcade will automatically use this Slack OAuth provider. If you have multiple Slack providers, see using multiple auth providers of the same type for more information.

Using Slack auth in app code

Use the Slack in your own and AI apps to get a token for the Slack API. See authorizing agents with Arcade to understand how this works.

Use client.auth.start() to get a token for the Slack API:

Python
from arcadepy import Arcade client = Arcade() # Automatically finds the `ARCADE_API_KEY` env variable user_id = "{arcade_user_id}" # Start the authorization process auth_response = client.auth.start( user_id=user_id, provider="slack", scopes=[ "chat:write", "im:write", "users.profile:read", "users:read", ], ) if auth_response.status != "completed": print("Please complete the authorization challenge in your browser:") print(auth_response.url) # Wait for the authorization to complete auth_response = client.auth.wait_for_completion(auth_response) token = auth_response.context.token # Do something interesting with the token...

Using Slack auth in custom tools

You can use the pre-built Arcade Slack MCP Server to quickly build and AI apps that interact with Slack.

If the pre-built tools in the Slack Server don’t meet your needs, you can author your own custom tools that interact with the Slack API.

Use the Slack() auth class to specify that a requires authorization with Slack. The context.authorization.token field will be automatically populated with the ’s Slack token:

Python
from typing import Annotated from slack_sdk import WebClient from arcade_tdk import ToolContext, tool from arcade_tdk.auth import Slack from arcade_tdk.errors import RetryableToolError @tool( requires_auth=Slack( scopes=[ "chat:write", "im:write", "users.profile:read", "users:read", ], ) ) def send_dm_to_user( context: ToolContext, user_name: Annotated[ str, "The Slack username of the person you want to message. Slack usernames are ALWAYS lowercase.", ], message: Annotated[str, "The message you want to send"], ): """Send a direct message to a user in Slack.""" slackClient = WebClient(token=context.authorization.token) # Retrieve the user's Slack ID based on their username userListResponse = slackClient.users_list() user_id = None for user in userListResponse["members"]: if user["name"].lower() == user_name.lower(): user_id = user["id"] break if not user_id: raise RetryableToolError( "User not found", developer_message=f"User with username '{user_name}' not found.", ) # Step 2: Retrieve the DM channel ID with the user im_response = slackClient.conversations_open(users=[user_id]) dm_channel_id = im_response["channel"]["id"] # Step 3: Send the message as if it's from you (because we're using a user token) slackClient.chat_postMessage(channel=dm_channel_id, text=message)
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