browser

Automate web browser interactions using natural language via CLI commands. Use when the user asks to browse websites, navigate web pages, extract data from websites, take screenshots, fill forms, click buttons, or interact with web applications. Supports remote Browserbase sessions with automatic CAPTCHA solving, anti-bot stealth mode, and residential proxies — ideal for scraping protected websites, bypassing bot detection, and interacting with JavaScript-heavy pages.

Namebrowser
Pathbrowserbase/browser
Version0.0.0
Originremote
SourceBrowserbase
Authorbrowserbase
RawOpen source file
CompatibilityRequires the browse CLI (`npm install -g @browserbasehq/browse-cli`). Remote Browserbase sessions need `BROWSERBASE_API_KEY`. Local mode uses Chrome/Chromium on your machine.
LicenseMIT

Install

skillctl install -r skillhub browserbase/browser

Browser Automation

Automate browser interactions using the browse CLI with Claude.

Setup check

Before running any browser commands, verify the CLI is available:

which browse || npm install -g @browserbasehq/browse-cli

Environment Selection (Local vs Remote)

The CLI supports explicit per-session environment overrides. If you do nothing, the next session defaults to Browserbase when BROWSERBASE_API_KEY is set and to local otherwise.

Local mode

Remote mode (Browserbase)

When to choose which

Commands

All commands work identically in both modes. The daemon auto-starts on first command.

Navigation

browse open <url>                        # Go to URL (aliases: goto)
browse open <url> --context-id <id>      # Load Browserbase context (remote only)
browse open <url> --context-id <id> --persist  # Load context + save changes back
browse reload                            # Reload current page
browse back                              # Go back in history
browse forward                           # Go forward in history

Page state (prefer snapshot over screenshot)

browse snapshot                          # Get accessibility tree with element refs (fast, structured)
browse screenshot [path]                 # Take visual screenshot (slow, uses vision tokens)
browse get url                           # Get current URL
browse get title                         # Get page title
browse get text <selector>               # Get text content (use "body" for all text)
browse get html <selector>               # Get HTML content of element
browse get value <selector>              # Get form field value

Use browse snapshot as your default for understanding page state — it returns the accessibility tree with element refs you can use to interact. Only use browse screenshot when you need visual context (layout, images, debugging).

Interaction

browse click <ref>                       # Click element by ref from snapshot (e.g., @0-5)
browse type <text>                       # Type text into focused element
browse fill <selector> <value>           # Fill input and press Enter
browse select <selector> <values...>     # Select dropdown option(s)
browse press <key>                       # Press key (Enter, Tab, Escape, Cmd+A, etc.)
browse drag <fromX> <fromY> <toX> <toY>  # Drag from one point to another
browse scroll <x> <y> <deltaX> <deltaY> # Scroll at coordinates
browse highlight <selector>              # Highlight element on page
browse is visible <selector>             # Check if element is visible
browse is checked <selector>             # Check if element is checked
browse wait <type> [arg]                 # Wait for: load, selector, timeout

Session management

browse stop                              # Stop the browser daemon (also clears env override)
browse status                            # Check daemon status (includes env)
browse env                               # Show current environment (local or remote)
browse env local                         # Use clean isolated local browser
browse env local --auto-connect          # Reuse existing Chrome, fallback to isolated
browse env local <port|url>              # Attach to a specific CDP target
browse env remote                        # Switch to Browserbase (requires API keys)
browse pages                             # List all open tabs
browse tab_switch <index>                # Switch to tab by index
browse tab_close [index]                 # Close tab

Typical workflow

If the environment matters, set it first with browse env local, browse env local --auto-connect, or browse env remote.

  1. browse open <url> — navigate to the page
  2. browse snapshot — read the accessibility tree to understand page structure and get element refs
  3. browse click <ref> / browse type <text> / browse fill <selector> <value> — interact using refs from snapshot
  4. browse snapshot — confirm the action worked
  5. Repeat 3-4 as needed
  6. browse stop — close the browser when done

Quick Example

browse open https://example.com
browse snapshot                          # see page structure + element refs
browse click @0-5                        # click element with ref 0-5
browse get title
browse stop

Mode Comparison

Feature Local Browserbase
Speed Faster Slightly slower
Setup Chrome required API key required
Reuse existing local cookies With browse env local --auto-connect N/A
Stealth mode No Yes (custom Chromium, anti-bot fingerprinting)
CAPTCHA solving No Yes (automatic reCAPTCHA/hCaptcha)
Residential proxies No Yes (201 countries, geo-targeting)
Session persistence No Yes (cookies/auth persist via contexts)
Best for Development/simple pages Protected sites, bot detection, production scraping

Best Practices

  1. Choose the local strategy deliberately: use browse env local for clean state, browse env local --auto-connect for existing local credentials, and browse env remote for protected sites
  2. Always browse open first before interacting
  3. Use browse snapshot to check page state — it's fast and gives you element refs
  4. Only screenshot when visual context is needed (layout checks, images, debugging)
  5. Use refs from snapshot to click/interact — e.g., browse click @0-5
  6. browse stop when done to clean up the browser session and clear the env override

Troubleshooting

Switching to Remote Mode

Switch to remote when you detect: CAPTCHAs (reCAPTCHA, hCaptcha, Turnstile), bot detection pages ("Checking your browser..."), HTTP 403/429, empty pages on sites that should have content, or the user asks for it.

Don't switch for simple sites (docs, wikis, public APIs, localhost).

browse env local             # clean isolated local browser
browse env local --auto-connect  # reuse existing Chrome state
browse env remote            # switch to Browserbase

Overrides are scoped per session and stay in effect until you switch again or run browse stop. After browse stop, the next start falls back to env-var-based auto detection. Use browse status to inspect the resolved local strategy while the daemon is running.

For detailed examples, see EXAMPLES.md. For API reference, see REFERENCE.md.

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