Browse the full directory of Claude Code plugins — commands, agents, skills, MCP servers, and more.
Browse plugins →What Claude Code plugins are, the nine component types they ship, ecosystem stats from 31,830 indexed plugins, and three plugins worth examining.
Claude Code plugins are installable packages that extend what Claude Code can do inside your terminal. Each plugin ships one or more component types — modular pieces that hook into specific parts of the Claude Code runtime. There are nine component types in total:
A single plugin can bundle multiple component types. For instance, a workflow plugin might ship skills that define the methodology, hooks that enforce it automatically, and commands that let you trigger steps manually.
The ecosystem has grown to a substantial size. As of this week, ClaudePluginHub indexes 31,830 active plugins contributed by 14,326 authors, collectively shipping 296,888 components.
The component distribution is heavily weighted toward skills. Here's the breakdown:
| Component Type | Count |
|---|---|
| Skills | 175,376 |
| Commands | 59,151 |
| Agents | 47,097 |
| MCP servers | 7,560 |
| Hooks | 6,942 |
| LSP servers | 519 |
| Output styles | 125 |
| Themes | 76 |
| Monitors | 42 |
Skills dominate because they're the most flexible component type — any behavioral instruction or methodology can be packaged as a skill. Commands and agents are the next largest categories, reflecting demand for both quick-access actions and longer autonomous workflows. Together, skills, commands, and agents account for roughly 95% of all components.
The ecosystem sees 23,379 installs per month across the directory. Growth has been steady: 2,152 new plugins were indexed this week, consistent with the 2,190 added the week before.
Rather than attempting to survey all 31,830 plugins, here are three that illustrate different approaches to extending Claude Code.
Superpowers (obra-superpowers-2) ships skills and hooks. It enforces a structured TDD workflow with parallel task execution, code review checkpoints, and root-cause debugging. The plugin guides brainstorming into validated specs, creates isolated git worktrees for feature branches, and runs verification checkpoints before merging or committing.
With 198,309 GitHub stars and 1,317 installs in the past seven days, it's one of the more widely adopted plugins in the directory. Its appeal is straightforward: it imposes development discipline that many teams want but find hard to maintain manually.
Caveman (juliusbrussee-caveman) takes a different approach entirely. It ships agents, skills, and hooks that compress Claude Code's communication into an ultra-compact format — cutting token usage by roughly 75% while preserving technical accuracy.
That trade-off matters for developers watching their token budgets. With 61,597 stars and 968 installs over seven days, it has found an audience among users who run long Claude Code sessions and want to reduce costs without sacrificing output quality. The plugin applies its compression across conversations, code reviews, commits, and file edits.
Impeccable (pbakaus-impeccable) focuses specifically on frontend work. It ships skills that audit, critique, and polish user interfaces — covering UX, visual hierarchy, accessibility, performance, responsive behavior, theming, typography, color, motion, micro-interactions, and design systems.
At 28,633 stars and 309 installs over seven days, it's narrower in scope than the other two but demonstrates how plugins can target specific development domains. If you work on frontend code and want Claude to apply production-grade UI standards, this is the kind of specialized plugin the ecosystem enables.
The plugin directory is the starting point. You can browse by component type — commands, agents, skills, MCP servers — or search by keyword.
When evaluating a plugin, pay attention to:
The directory currently indexes nine component types, but not all are equally mature. Skills, commands, and agents make up 95% of all components. LSP servers, output styles, themes, and monitors are newer categories with far fewer entries — 762 combined out of 296,888 total.
If you're evaluating Claude Code plugins for the first time, the ecosystem is large enough to have specialized options for most development workflows but young enough that quality varies widely. The three plugins above — Superpowers for structured development workflows, Caveman for token efficiency, and Impeccable for frontend polish — show the range of what's possible.
Start with a specific problem you want Claude Code to handle better, browse the directory for plugins targeting that area, and check the component types to understand how deeply the plugin integrates. The nine component types give you a framework for evaluating what any plugin actually does under the hood.
Enforces a structured TDD workflow with parallel task execution, code review, and root-cause debugging. Guides brainstorming into validated specs, creates isolated git worktrees for feature branches, and runs verification checkpoints before merging or committing.
Cuts Claude Code token usage by ~75% using ultra-compressed caveman-style communication across conversations, code reviews, commits, and file edits while preserving full technical accuracy.
Audit, critique, and polish frontend interfaces with production-grade code changes covering UX, visual hierarchy, accessibility, performance, responsive behavior, theming, typography, color, motion, micro-interactions, and design systems.