Opera is taking a big step toward AI-driven browsing, and this time it is opening the door to other AI assistants. The company has introduced an MCP Connector for Opera Neon, which allows third-party AI agents like ChatGPT, Claude, n8n, Lovable, and OpenClaw to directly connect to the browser.
This means your AI can now see what is on your screen and act on it, turning Neon into an autonomous browsing agent. The feature is available now for paid Neon users, with plans to bring a simpler version to other Opera browsers later.
How does MCP actually let AI control your browser?
To understand this shift, you need to know what MCP is. Model Context Protocol is an open standard introduced by Anthropic. It allows AI tools to connect with apps and services without building separate integrations for each one.
With an MCP server in place, any compatible AI can instantly interact with supported tools. In Opera Neon’s case, that tool is your browser. It gives AI visibility into what is on your screen and the ability to interact with it in real-time.
Neon was already built around agentic browsing, where its native AI could perform tasks for you. Now, that capability is no longer limited to Opera’s own system. Any AI that supports MCP can plug in and use the browser the same way.
What can you actually do inside Opera Neon with the new upgrade?
Once connected, you can ask AI tools to carry out real browsing tasks instead of just suggesting steps. You can search for information, open pages, navigate websites, and complete actions across multiple tabs.
The AI can see your current context and respond accordingly, which makes multi-step tasks smoother. It can also move between pages, interact with elements, and complete workflows while you focus on the end result.
For now, this is limited to Neon, but Opera’s plan to expand MCP support suggests this could soon become a standard feature across browsers.
From AI in your browser to AI running your browser
The AI race is moving fast. It started with simple chatbots answering questions, then shifted into a competition to build smarter models. Soon after, browser companies joined in, first by adding small AI features, and then by building entire browsers around AI.
That is how we ended up with AI-first browsers like Perplexity’s Comet and OpenAI’s Atlas. But Opera was one of the first to fully commit to the idea with Neon, its agentic browser built to complete tasks for you.
Now, the direction is flipping again. It is no longer just about adding AI to browsers. AI is starting to take control of them. With its new MCP Connector, Opera is pushing this next phase, where external AI tools can step in and actually operate your browser for you.