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Plugins extend OpenCode in-process. They can transform agents, models, commands, integrations, references, skills, and tools; intercept model requests and tool execution; and call a subset of the V2 client.
The V2 plugin API is beta. Entrypoints, hooks, draft shapes, and configuration may change before the stable release. Use the /v2 exports described on this page.

Load plugins

Plugins can be loaded from npm packages, explicit local paths, or config directories. Each module must have one default export containing a unique plugin id and a setup function.

Configuration

Add ordered entries to the plugins field in opencode.json(c):
opencode.jsonc
{
  "$schema": "https://opencode.ai/config.json",
  "plugins": [
    "opencode-acme-plugin@1.2.0",
    "@acme/opencode-plugin",
    "./plugins/local.ts",
    {
      "package": "./plugins/reviewer.ts",
      "options": {
        "agent": "reviewer",
        "strict": true
      }
    }
  ]
}
A string is either a package specifier or a local path. Local paths must start with ./ or ../ and resolve relative to the configuration file containing the entry. Absolute paths and file:// URLs are also supported. Both scoped packages and versioned package specifiers are supported. Use the object form to pass JSON configuration to the plugin. OpenCode passes options unchanged as ctx.options; omitted options become an empty object. The plugin owns validation and defaults for its options. See Config for configuration locations and precedence. Entries from all applicable files are processed from lowest to highest precedence rather than replacing the entire array.

Local discovery

OpenCode automatically scans this directory in every discovered OpenCode config directory:
.opencode/plugins/
The equivalent global directory is ~/.config/opencode/plugins/. Direct .ts and .js children are loaded. An immediate child directory is also loaded as a package when OpenCode can resolve a string exports, module, or main entrypoint, or an index.ts or index.js file. A plugins/ directory beside a project-root opencode.json is not discovered automatically. Put it under .opencode/, or add its file explicitly with a relative config entry.

Enable and disable

A string beginning with - disables plugins by their exported id. * matches every ID, and a suffix of .* matches an ID prefix. Directives are applied in order:
opencode.jsonc
{
  "plugins": [
    "./plugins/reviewer.ts",
    "-acme.reviewer",
    "-opencode.provider.*",
    "opencode.provider.openai"
  ]
}
Package specifiers and local paths locate plugin modules; they are not disable selectors. Use the id from the plugin’s default export to disable it. A later ID entry re-enables a loaded or built-in plugin. Explicit config directives run after local auto-discovery, so they can disable discovered plugins by ID. User plugins are activated in configured order between OpenCode’s internal plugin phases. Hooks run sequentially in registration order, and later hooks observe earlier mutations. Do not depend on the internal phase ordering while the API is beta.

Installation and dependencies

OpenCode installs bare package entries and their production dependencies into an isolated cache. Package installation does not run lifecycle scripts. Published packages should expose their plugin entrypoint and include every runtime import in dependencies. Local files and local package directories are imported directly. OpenCode does not install their dependencies. Install dependencies in a package.json visible from the plugin file, for example:
cd .opencode
bun add @opencode-ai/plugin@next
Match the plugin package version to the OpenCode release you target. Configuration and discovered plugin files under watched config directories are reloaded when they change. Reloading replaces the active plugin generation and releases its scoped registrations. Restart OpenCode after changing an npm package version or a local dependency when no watched file changed.

Create a plugin

Export the result of Plugin.define as the module default:
.opencode/plugins/reviewer.ts
import { Plugin } from "@opencode-ai/plugin/v2"

export default Plugin.define({
  id: "acme.reviewer",
  setup: async (ctx) => {
    const description =
      typeof ctx.options.description === "string"
        ? ctx.options.description
        : "Reviews code for regressions"

    await ctx.agent.transform((agents) => {
      agents.update("reviewer", (agent) => {
        agent.description = description
        agent.mode = "subagent"
      })
    })
  },
})
setup runs each time the plugin is activated. Register long-lived behavior during setup; do not wait there on an infinite event stream. It may return a synchronous or asynchronous cleanup function. OpenCode awaits that cleanup when the plugin is disabled, reloaded, or shut down:
setup: async (ctx) => {
  const controller = new AbortController()
  const task = synchronize(ctx, controller.signal)

  return async () => {
    controller.abort()
    await task
  }
}
Hook registrations are released automatically with the same plugin scope. Use the returned cleanup for resources the plugin owns, such as timers, watchers, connections, and background tasks.

Context

The plugin context is essentially an OpenCode server client. Its read and action methods use the same inputs and responses as the client. It adds plugin-only methods for transforms, runtime hooks, reloads, registrations, and plugin options.
CapabilityAvailable operations
ctx.agentlist, transform, reload
ctx.catalog.providerlist, get
ctx.catalog.modellist, default
ctx.catalogtransform, reload
ctx.commandlist, transform, reload
ctx.integrationlist, get, connect, attempt, transform, reload, and connection lookup/resolution
ctx.pluginlist currently active plugin IDs
ctx.referencelist, transform, reload
ctx.sessioncreate, get, prompt, command, interrupt, and hook
ctx.skilllist, transform, reload
ctx.tooltransform and hook
ctx.aisdkhook
ctx.eventsubscribe to the current public server event stream
ctx.optionsReadonly options from the matching config object

Transform hooks

Transform hooks let a plugin modify how OpenCode is configured. Use them to add or remove definitions, override settings, choose defaults, and provide tools or other sources.
TransformDraft operations
agent.transformlist, get, default, update, remove
catalog.transformProvider list, get, update, remove; model get, update, remove; default model get, set
command.transformlist, get, update, remove
integration.transformIntegration list, get, update, remove; method list, update, remove
reference.transformadd, remove, list
skill.transformsource, list
tool.transformadd
Here’s an example that keeps models synced from a remote source:
.opencode/plugins/remote-models.js
import { Plugin } from "@opencode-ai/plugin/v2"

export default Plugin.define({
  id: "acme.remote-models",
  setup: async (ctx) => {
    let models = []

    await ctx.catalog.transform((catalog) => {
      for (const model of models) {
        catalog.model.update(model.providerID, model.id, (draft) => Object.assign(draft, model))
      }
    })

    const refresh = async () => {
      const response = await fetch("https://example.com/opencode/models.json", {
        signal: AbortSignal.timeout(10_000),
      })
      if (!response.ok) return
      models = await response.json()
      await ctx.catalog.reload()
    }

    await refresh()
    const timer = setInterval(() => void refresh().catch(console.error), 60_000)
    return () => clearInterval(timer)
  },
})
ctx.catalog.reload() replays every catalog transform to derive the new catalog. Each plugin’s logic remains composed with the others, so a later plugin can still modify models added by an earlier one. The catalog updates without restarting OpenCode.

Runtime hooks

Runtime hooks intercept live operations. Their event objects expose specific mutable fields:
HookMutable fields
ctx.aisdk.hook("sdk", callback)sdk, after inspecting model, package, and options
ctx.aisdk.hook("language", callback)language, after inspecting model, sdk, and options
ctx.session.hook("request", callback)system, messages, and the tools record immediately before model dispatch
ctx.tool.hook("execute.before", callback)input, before the selected tool executes
ctx.tool.hook("execute.after", callback)result, output, and outputPaths, after execution settles
For example, remove a tool from selected model requests and normalize another tool’s input:
.opencode/plugins/guards.ts
import { Plugin } from "@opencode-ai/plugin/v2"

export default Plugin.define({
  id: "acme.guards",
  setup: async (ctx) => {
    await ctx.session.hook("request", (event) => {
      delete event.tools.write
    })

    await ctx.tool.hook("execute.before", (event) => {
      if (event.tool !== "lookup" || typeof event.input !== "object" || event.input === null) return
      event.input = { ...event.input, source: "plugin" }
    })
  },
})
A hook failure fails the operation it intercepts. Keep runtime hooks fast and handle expected errors inside the callback.

Examples

Add a tool

Pass a tool declaration to tools.add. Define its input with JSON Schema and use an async executor:
.opencode/plugins/greeting.js
import { Plugin } from "@opencode-ai/plugin/v2"

export default Plugin.define({
  id: "acme.greeting",
  setup: async (ctx) => {
    await ctx.tool.transform((tools) => {
      tools.add({
        name: "greeting",
        description: "Create a greeting",
        jsonSchema: {
          type: "object",
          properties: {
            name: { type: "string" },
          },
          required: ["name"],
          additionalProperties: false,
        },
        execute: async ({ name }) => {
          const text = `Hello, ${name}!`
          return {
            structured: { greeting: text },
            content: [{ type: "text", text }],
          }
        },
      })
    })
  },
})
Unsupported characters in tool and group names are normalized to underscores. The resulting exposed key must begin with a letter and contain at most 64 letters, digits, underscores, or hyphens. Set options on the declaration to configure registration with { group, deferred }:
  • group prefixes and groups the exposed tool name.
  • deferred: true makes the tool available through the deferred execute tool instead of exposing it directly.
The executor receives a second context argument containing sessionID, agent, assistantMessageID, and toolCallID.

Add a command

.opencode/plugins/review-command.js
import { Plugin } from "@opencode-ai/plugin/v2"

export default Plugin.define({
  id: "acme.review-command",
  setup: async (ctx) => {
    await ctx.command.transform((commands) => {
      commands.update("review", (command) => {
        command.description = "Review the current changes"
        command.template = "Review the current changes for correctness and missing tests."
      })
    })
  },
})

Set the default model

.opencode/plugins/default-model.js
import { Plugin } from "@opencode-ai/plugin/v2"

export default Plugin.define({
  id: "acme.default-model",
  setup: async (ctx) => {
    await ctx.catalog.transform((catalog) => {
      catalog.model.default.set("anthropic", "claude-sonnet-4-5")
    })
  },
})

Publish a package

A package plugin uses the same default export as a local plugin. A minimal manifest is:
package.json
{
  "name": "opencode-acme-plugin",
  "version": "1.0.0",
  "type": "module",
  "exports": "./src/index.ts",
  "dependencies": {
    "@opencode-ai/plugin": "next"
  }
}
Use versions compatible with the OpenCode release you target and test the installed package, not only a workspace-linked copy. Because the plugin API is beta, publish compatible plugin updates when V2 entrypoints or contracts change.

Verify loading

List active plugin IDs through the V2 API:
opencode2 api get /api/plugin
If a plugin is absent, check the server log described in Troubleshooting. Invalid modules and setup failures are logged; one failing package does not prevent unrelated valid packages from being resolved.

Effect

OpenCode provides a first-class Effect API for plugins through the @opencode-ai/plugin/v2/effect entrypoint. Install effect alongside the plugin package and export an effect function instead of setup:
bun add @opencode-ai/plugin@next effect
.opencode/plugins/reviewer-effect.ts
import { Plugin } from "@opencode-ai/plugin/v2/effect"
import { Effect } from "effect"

export default Plugin.define({
  id: "acme.reviewer-effect",
  effect: (ctx) =>
    Effect.gen(function* () {
      yield* ctx.agent.transform((agents) => {
        agents.update("reviewer", (agent) => {
          agent.description = "Reviews code for regressions"
          agent.mode = "subagent"
        })
      })
    }),
})
Context operations return Effects. The plugin effect is scoped, so finalizers, fibers, and registrations are released when the plugin reloads or unloads. OpenCode does not expose its private Core services to the plugin; use the capabilities on ctx. Typed tools can use Schema from effect and the contracts exported from @opencode-ai/plugin/v2/effect/tool. Their executors return an Effect and may fail with the typed tool failure channel.