BitGo has added a new layer to its developer offering with the launch of its Model Context Protocol, or MCP, Server. This move brings the company’s institutional crypto infrastructure directly into AI-assisted development workflows. The rollout, which BitGo says is now live through its Developer Portal, allows compatible AI tools to search, read and interact with BitGo documentation using natural language rather than manual browsing.
BitGo says the feature is meant to help developers work faster across wallet, trading and staking integrations while staying anchored to the company’s official technical materials. The launch matters because it puts BitGo’s infrastructure in the path of the software tools many developers are already using every day.
According to BitGo’s changelog, the MCP server is designed to let AI-powered clients pull documentation context directly from the Developer Portal, including information on wallets, policies, webhooks, staking and related integration flows. That means a developer working in an AI-enabled editor or assistant can ask a question in plain language and receive responses grounded in BitGo’s own docs, instead of jumping between pages or searching through API references by hand.
BitGo said the server is compatible with several MCP-enabled environments, including Claude Code, Claude Desktop, ChatGPT, Cursor, JetBrains IDEs, VS Code and Windsurf. The company also said setup instructions are available through the Developer Portal, which now includes a dedicated “Ask AI” tool for page-level documentation guidance. Together, those tools point to a broader push to make BitGo’s platform more accessible inside AI-native coding environments, rather than treating documentation as a separate destination developers have to leave their workflow to consult.
Mike Belshe, BitGo’s CEO and co-founder, framed the launch as part of a wider shift in how developers build and interact with infrastructure. In BitGo’s announcement, he said AI is changing how developers navigate technical systems and that developers can now treat BitGo as “agentic infrastructure,” adding that the launch is only the first step in making the platform accessible to the AI economy.
The product also reflects the growing relevance of MCP itself. BitGo describes MCP as an open standard that enables AI assistants to connect to external sources of information, and the company is using that framework to expose its own technical documentation in a form AI clients can understand and retrieve more naturally. In practice, that should reduce friction for teams building on BitGo by making it easier to ask questions about transaction flows, wallet operations, or API setup and receive responses pulled from the relevant documentation.
BitGo’s move comes from a company that has spent more than a decade positioning itself as institutional plumbing for digital assets. On its official site and investor materials, BitGo describes itself as the digital asset infrastructure company delivering custody, wallets, staking, trading, financing, stablecoins and settlement services from regulated cold storage. The company says it was founded in 2013 and now serves thousands of institutions and millions of investors worldwide.
That background helps explain why the MCP launch is notable. BitGo is not simply adding a chatbot to a support page. It is extending its existing developer ecosystem into the AI tools that increasingly shape how software is written, tested and deployed. For institutions and builders working in crypto, the promise is less about novelty and more about speed, consistency and fewer mistakes when dealing with complex infrastructure.
If the documentation itself can be queried through AI without losing the authority of the original source, the development cycle becomes more direct and potentially less error-prone. That is especially relevant in an industry where custody, transaction signing and policy controls leave little room for guesswork.
BitGo’s launch also lands at a time when the company is leaning harder into its identity as a regulated institutional platform. Its public materials highlight a global footprint of regulated entities, including BitGo Bank & Trust, National Association, and the company has repeatedly emphasized its role in building infrastructure for digital asset businesses. Bringing MCP into the developer portal fits that strategy by making its technical stack easier to discover and use inside modern AI-first workflows.
For developers, the practical takeaway is straightforward: BitGo’s documentation is now easier to query through AI clients, and the company is signaling that more AI-oriented tooling could follow. For BitGo, the launch is another step toward making its institutional crypto stack feel less like a static platform and more like an interactive system built for the way teams actually code today.



Wormhole’s native token has had a tough time since launch, debuting at $1.66 before dropping significantly despite the general crypto market’s bull cycle. Wormhole, an interoperability protocol facilitating asset transfers between blockchains, announced updated tokenomics to its native Wormhole (W) token, including a token reserve and more yield for stakers. The changes could affect the protocol’s governance, as staked Wormhole tokens allocate voting power to delegates.According to a Wednesday announcement, three main changes are coming to the Wormhole token: a W reserve funded with protocol fees and revenue, a 4% base yield for staking with higher rewards for active ecosystem participants, and a change from bulk unlocks to biweekly unlocks.“The goal of Wormhole Contributors is to significantly expand the asset transfer and messaging volume that Wormhole facilitates over the next 1-2 years,” the protocol said. According to Wormhole, more tokens will be locked as adoption takes place and revenue filters back to the company.Read more