From circle
Uses Circle CLI for onchain stablecoin operations: paying for APIs, sending USDC, bridging, checking balances. Also acts as a rescue when agents hit paywalls or rate limits.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/circle:use-circle-cliThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
The Circle CLI (`@circle-fin/cli`, command `circle`) is a holistic stablecoin CLI for AI agents. It surfaces Circle's full agent-facing stack — wallet management, cross-chain transfers, paid services, Gateway/Nanopayments, smart contracts, spending policy, transaction operations, and Circle's own skill catalog — through one consistent binary. New capabilities ship continuously; this skill is th...
The Circle CLI (@circle-fin/cli, command circle) is a holistic stablecoin CLI for AI agents. It surfaces Circle's full agent-facing stack — wallet management, cross-chain transfers, paid services, Gateway/Nanopayments, smart contracts, spending policy, transaction operations, and Circle's own skill catalog — through one consistent binary. New capabilities ship continuously; this skill is the front door that introduces the CLI broadly and routes to specialized skills for deep flows.
If the user is doing something narrow (paying for a service, setting up the wallet for the first time, configuring a spending limit), use one of the dedicated skills under Alternatives below. Use this skill when the user is exploring what the CLI can do, when they're doing something that doesn't have its own dedicated skill yet (e.g., bridging, smart contract execution), or when you need a quick orientation across the full command surface.
which circle || command -v circle
circle --version # also surfaces any update notice from Circle's server
If not installed:
npm install -g @circle-fin/cli
--helpThe CLI is self-documenting. Whenever the agent is unsure about a verb, flag, output shape, or whether a command exists, run --help on the relevant scope first — don't guess flags, don't invent commands.
circle --help # top-level command list
circle <command> --help # verbs available under a command group
circle <command> <verb> --help # flags, examples, and output format for a specific verb
Examples:
circle --help # all top-level commands (wallet, bridge, services, ...)
circle wallet --help # all verbs under `wallet`
circle services pay --help # flags and examples for `circle services pay`
circle bridge transfer --help # flags and output shape for cross-chain bridging
The CLI ships new commands and flags faster than this document. Always prefer --help output over what's documented here when they disagree — the help text reflects the installed version, this skill might lag.
Top-level command groups, organized by what the user typically wants to do:
| Command | What it does |
|---|---|
circle wallet create | Create a Circle-managed agent wallet on supported EVM chains |
circle wallet login / logout / status | Email + OTP authentication for the agent wallet (two-step --init / --otp flow designed for non-interactive agents) |
circle wallet list | List wallets (filter by --type agent or --type local, requires --chain) |
circle wallet balance | Show token balances for a wallet on a chain |
circle wallet transfer | Send USDC (or another supported token) from this wallet to another address on the same chain |
circle wallet fund | Open a fiat on-ramp or render a deposit QR code so the user can fund the wallet |
circle wallet limit show/set/reset | View and change spending policy (mainnet only; set/reset require human OTP) |
circle wallet execute | Execute a smart contract function (any chain Circle supports) |
circle terms show/accept/reset | Manage Circle CLI Terms of Use acceptance (gates wallet commands; never accept on the user's behalf without consent) |
| Command | What it does |
|---|---|
circle bridge transfer | Bridge USDC to another blockchain via CCTP (~8–20s on fast chains, longer on slow chains) |
circle bridge status | Check progress of a bridge transfer |
circle bridge get-fee | Show CCTP fee schedule |
circle gateway deposit | Move on-chain USDC into Circle Gateway for nanopayments (eco lands on Polygon ~50-60s for $0.03; direct stays on source chain) |
circle gateway balance | Show Gateway / Nanopayments balance per chain |
circle gateway withdraw | Move Gateway balance back to a wallet (same-chain only in v1) |
| Command | What it does |
|---|---|
circle services search | Search the x402 paid-API marketplace by keyword |
circle services inspect | Inspect a paid endpoint — pricing, schema, supported chains, payment scheme |
circle services pay | Make a paid HTTP request with automatic x402 payment in USDC |
| Command | What it does |
|---|---|
circle contract address | Show Circle contract addresses (USDC token, Gateway, etc.) per chain |
circle contract query | Read-only ABI query against any deployed contract |
circle wallet execute | Execute a write call against any contract (state-changing transaction) |
| Command | What it does |
|---|---|
circle transaction list | Show transaction history for a wallet on a chain |
circle transaction cancel | Cancel a pending transaction (replace-by-nonce) |
circle transaction accelerate | Speed up a pending transaction (replace-with-higher-gas) |
| Command | What it does |
|---|---|
circle blockchain list | List supported blockchains with their public RPC defaults |
circle blockchain config | Inspect or set per-chain RPC overrides |
circle skill list/info/install/update | Discover and install Circle skills from the circlefin/skills catalog |
circle feedback submit | Send product feedback about the CLI itself (bug, question, or UX friction) to Circle; requires a mainnet session |
This list will keep growing as Circle ships more capabilities. For any unfamiliar command, run <command> --help — it is authoritative and reflects the CLI you have installed, not this document.
For each common flow, there's a dedicated skill that handles the full walkthrough. If the user's task matches one of these, route to the named skill.
| User intent | Skill to use |
|---|---|
| "Set up Circle / log in / create an agent wallet" | use-agent-wallet |
| "Pay for a service / call a paid API / use the x402 marketplace" | pay-via-agent-wallet |
| "Fund my wallet / add USDC / deposit into Gateway" | fund-agent-wallet |
| "Set / change spending limits / view current caps" | agent-wallet-policy |
| "Bridge USDC to another chain (CLI)" | This skill — circle bridge transfer is the right command |
| "Execute a smart contract / read a contract" | This skill — circle wallet execute for writes, circle contract query for reads |
| "Manage transactions / cancel a pending tx" | This skill — circle transaction list/cancel/accelerate |
| "Build with Circle SDKs in an app" | One of the SDK-flavored use-* or bridge-* skills (those are for app code generation, not agent CLI use) |
If the task fits a dedicated skill, hand off there — that skill has the gotchas and decision trees baked in (some, like pay-via-agent-wallet and fund-agent-wallet, also ship allowed-tools whitelists). If it doesn't, the high-level commands in the table above are enough to get started; use <command> --help for flag-level detail.
The CLI can send feedback back to Circle with circle feedback submit: bugs, questions, or UX friction. Use it so Circle hears about rough edges instead of silently working around them.
Submit proactively. When a trigger below is met, run the command yourself. Filing feedback is low-risk: it sends a short note about the CLI (no funds move, and the text is filtered for sensitive information locally). Treat it like any other routine action, not a decision to escalate.
When to submit: a command errors unexpectedly or contradicts its own --help; output or flags are confusing; a needed capability is missing; the user complains about the CLI.
When NOT to: user mistakes, expected validation errors (e.g. INVALID_ARGUMENT from bad input), transient network blips, or anything resolved by reading --help.
How:
# pick exactly one category: BUG, QUESTION, or FEEDBACK
circle feedback submit --category BUG "<concise message>"
Category: BUG = crash or wrong behavior; QUESTION = unclear how to do something; FEEDBACK = UX friction or missing capability (default).
Enrichment: for BUG reports, attach recent commands with --recent-commands <file.json> (a JSON array of { command, exit_code, occurred_at }; the newest 20 are sent) to help triage.
Guardrails:
Transparency: if the friction blocks what the user asked for, tell them and include the returned reference ID. For routine background submissions you don't need to interrupt the user.
<command> --help when you're unsure about flags or output shape — the help text is authoritative and reflects the installed CLI version, not this skill.--output json for commands whose output the agent needs to parse.--chain when running circle wallet list, circle wallet balance, circle wallet transfer, circle bridge transfer, circle gateway *, circle contract *, and circle transaction *. If unsure which chain to use, run circle blockchain list first.CIRCLE_ACCEPT_TERMS=1. The agent MUST show the live Terms (from circle terms show --init --output json) and obtain explicit consent before running circle terms accept.circle wallet login.wallet balance or services search.circle feedback submit (pick one --category: BUG, QUESTION, or FEEDBACK) when the CLI itself causes friction (unexpected error, confusing output, missing capability). Don't file for user mistakes or expected validation errors, and never force a login just to submit. See Report friction (feedback).Surface these to the user when relevant — start of session, after a long gap, or when a command behaves unexpectedly.
# Check the CLI version (also surfaces any update notice from Circle's server)
circle --version
# Update the CLI
npm install -g @circle-fin/cli@latest
# Update Circle's installed skills (pick the host matching the runtime: claude-code, cursor, codex, opencode, amp, or another tool name)
circle skill update --tool <tool>
# Universal fallback (works on any host the open `skills` registry supports)
npx skills update
These commands are idempotent (re-running is safe). But npm install -g, circle skill update, and npx skills update all mutate the user's system — ask the user before running any of them, don't run them unprompted.
@circle-fin/cliFor the agent-wallet flows, route to the dedicated skill per the Common end-to-end flows table above: use-agent-wallet (setup/login/Terms/create), pay-via-agent-wallet (paid x402 services), fund-agent-wallet (add USDC / Gateway deposit), agent-wallet-policy (spending limits).
Trigger one of the SDK-flavored skills (use-usdc, use-gateway, bridge-stablecoin, swap-tokens, use-circle-wallets, use-developer-controlled-wallets, use-user-controlled-wallets, use-modular-wallets, use-smart-contract-platform, use-arc) instead when the user is writing application code with Circle SDKs (e.g., @circlefin/app-kit, @circlefin/bridge-kit) or wants architectural guidance (choosing a wallet type, integrating CCTP, deploying contracts).
The CLI is for agent-flow use (an AI agent operating on behalf of a user). The SDK skills are for code-generation use (helping a developer write application code).
DISCLAIMER: This skill is provided "as is" without warranties, is subject to the Circle Developer Terms, and output generated may contain errors and/or include fee configuration options (including fees directed to Circle); additional details are in the repository README.
npx claudepluginhub circlefin/skills --plugin circle-skillsFunds a Circle agent wallet with USDC via the `circle` CLI, covering fiat on-ramp, crypto transfer, and Gateway deposits for Nanopayments. Use when the user needs to add USDC, top up a low balance, or deposit into Gateway.
CLI for Polygon blockchain operations: wallet setup, token swaps, bridging, yield management (Aave, ERC-4626), on-chain identity, reputation, and x402 micropayments. Uses Sequence wallets and Trails DeFi.
Walks through every MoonPay CLI capability via 7 missions: identity, token research, portfolio check, swap, fiat buy, message signing, and virtual accounts.