A curated collection of skills, hooks, slash-commands, and tools to enhance development workflows with Claude Code.
Awesome Claude Code is a curated GitHub repository that serves as a directory for resources, tools, and configurations designed to enhance the Anthropic Claude Code AI coding assistant. It aggregates community-contributed skills, hooks, slash-commands, and workflows to help developers extend Claude Code's functionality and integrate it more effectively into their development processes. The project solves the problem of discovering and evaluating the growing ecosystem of Claude Code enhancements by providing a centralized, organized collection.
Developers and engineers who use Claude Code for AI-assisted programming and want to extend its capabilities with community-built tools, workflows, and configurations. It's particularly valuable for power users seeking to automate complex development tasks or integrate Claude Code into specialized domains.
Developers choose Awesome Claude Code because it provides a single, well-organized source for discovering the most useful community contributions to the Claude Code ecosystem. Instead of searching scattered repositories, users can find vetted resources across all major enhancement categories, saving time and ensuring they're using proven tools and patterns.
A curated list of awesome skills, hooks, slash-commands, agent orchestrators, applications, and plugins for Claude Code by Anthropic
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
The README organizes over 100 entries across categories like Agent Skills, Workflows, and Tooling, including specialized resources such as Trail of Bits Security Skills for code auditing.
Entries are selectively included with descriptive assessments, e.g., claude-devtools is highlighted as 'well-designed' with 'nice visual design,' ensuring users find reliable tools.
The 'Latest Additions' section features recent contributions like Claude Code Agent Teams exercises, demonstrating ongoing maintenance and relevance.
Users can switch between README formats (Awesome, Extra, Classic, Flat) via badges at the top, catering to different preferences for navigation and readability.
Some resources are marked as unstable or early-stage, such as parry being in 'early development phase,' which can lead to integration issues or abandonment.
Combining multiple tools like orchestrators (e.g., Ruflo) requires significant technical expertise, as described with complex setups and dependencies in their entries.
Resources like Harness have 'resources in Korean,' limiting accessibility for non-Korean speakers and posing challenges in documentation and usage.