You can expose any public Space that has a visible MCP badge into a callable tool that will be available in any MCP-compatible client, you can add as many Spaces as you want and without writing a single line of code.
From your Hub MCP settings, select your MCP client (VSCode, Cursor, Claude Code, etc.) then follow the setup instructions.



If your MCP client is configured correctly, the Spaces you added will be available instantly without changing anything (if it doesn’t restart your client and it should appear). Most MCP clients will list what tools are currently loaded so you can make sure the Space is available.
To create your own MCP-enabled Space, you need to Create a new Gradio Space then make sure to enable MCP support in the code. Get started with Gradio Spaces and make sure to check the detailed MCP guide for more details.
First, install Gradio with MCP support:
pip install "gradio[mcp]"Then create your app with clear type hints and docstrings:
import gradio as gr
def letter_counter(word: str, letter: str) -> int:
"""Count occurrences of a letter in a word.
Args:
word: The word to search in
letter: The letter to count
Returns:
Number of times the letter appears in the word
"""
return word.lower().count(letter.lower())
demo = gr.Interface(fn=letter_counter,
inputs=["text", "text"],
outputs="number")
demo.launch(mcp_server=True) # exposes an MCP schema automaticallyPush the app to a Gradio Space and it will automatically receive the MCP badge. Anyone can then add it as a tool with a single click.
mcp_server=True parameter to your launch() method, and ensure your functions have clear type hints and docstrings - you can use AI tools to automate this quite easily (example of AI generated docstrings).As Hugging Face Spaces is the largest directory of AI apps, you can find many creative tools that can be used as MCP tools. Mixing and matching different Spaces can lead to powerful and creative workflows.