| name | telegram |
| description | Agent-callable Telegram bot tools — send messages, media, locations, contacts, and polls; edit, delete, forward, copy, and pin messages; resolve chats, members, and files. Use when the user mentions Telegram or wants a bot to post, manage, or look up Telegram content — including requests that don't name Telegram explicitly, e.g. "message the team channel", "post this update to the group". |
| license | Elastic-2.0 |
| compatibility | Run `npm install` in this directory, then `node cli.js`. The TypeScript source needs Node.js 22.18+; on older Node, run `cli.js` for prebuilt / alternative-runtime options. |
| metadata | {"title":"Telegram","source":"https://github.com/zapier/connectors/blob/main/apps/telegram/SKILL.md","zapier-app-key":"TelegramCLIAPI","api-docs":"https://core.telegram.org/bots/api"} |
Telegram
Independent, unofficial connector for Telegram. Not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by Telegram. "Telegram" is a trademark of its owner, used only to identify the service this connector works with.
Scripts for a Telegram bot, against the Telegram Bot API (https://api.telegram.org/bot<token>/<method>). Send text, media, locations, contacts, and polls; edit, delete, forward, copy, and pin messages; and resolve the chats, members, and files a bot interacts with. Every script acts as the bot — the bot must be a member of any chat it messages, and a user must message the bot first before the bot can DM them.
When to use this
- An agent needs a Telegram bot to send a message, photo, document, video, audio, location, contact, or poll to a chat.
- An agent needs to manage messages the bot sent — edit, delete, forward, copy, pin, or unpin.
- An agent needs to resolve a chat or member — find a
chat_id (via listRecentChats), confirm a chat (getChat), check a member's role (getChatMember), or list admins.
Setup
This is an agentskills.io skill.
If this connector is already exposed to you as callable tools (e.g. mcp__telegram__<tool>), that's a valid path — call them directly. Everything below is only for standalone terminal use when no such tools are loaded.
If the connector has not been installed as a skill yet, install it first with npx skills zapier/connectors --skill telegram (or your harness's own skill-install mechanism), then continue here.
The connector runs on Node.js 22.18+ and needs a one-time npm install in this directory. cli.js is the entry point — list every script with node cli.js --help, then learn a script's inputs and connections with node cli.js run <script> --help. On older Node, run node cli.js --help anyway: it detects your runtime and prints how to run without upgrading (the prebuilt npm package, or another runtime) — don't skip the connector just because Node is old.
cli.js self-checks readiness before running: if dependencies aren't installed it exits non-zero with the exact install command (it disambiguates a read-only directory from a sandbox-blocked package cache). Run that, then re-run your command.
Scripts
All scripts use a single telegram connection.
Auth
Pass auth as one connection string with --connection [<resolver>:]<value>. The value is a selector, not the secret; the <resolver>: prefix is optional (a bare value goes to the first resolver that claims it). Each script declares the connections it needs and the resolvers each accepts — always run node cli.js run <script> --help to see them rather than relying on this file.
A Telegram bot has one credential: the bot token issued by @BotFather (send /newbot, or /token to regenerate). There is no OAuth and no scopes — the token grants full control of the bot.
zapier:<connection-id> (recommended) — route through a Zapier-managed Telegram connection (TELEGRAM_ZAPIER_CONNECTION_ID). Zapier holds the bot token and injects it for each request; a bare UUID-shaped value auto-claims this resolver. Find the id with npx zapier-sdk list-connections TelegramCLIAPI.
env:TELEGRAM_BOT_TOKEN (direct) — read the bot token from the named environment variable. The connector places it in the request path as the Telegram API requires; the token stays in env and never touches argv. A bare --connection TELEGRAM_BOT_TOKEN auto-claims this once the var is set.
If no connection is passed the script fails with an actionable error listing the resolvers in match order.
Running scripts
After npm install, run a script by name with node cli.js run <script>, or execute its file directly — both take the same arguments and both accept --help. Always run a script's --help first to learn its exact input schema and connections, then invoke it:
node cli.js run <script> '<input-json>' --connection [<resolver>:]<value>
./scripts/<script>.ts '<input-json>' --connection [<resolver>:]<value>
When a harness can't execute scripts directly, fall back to MCP — node cli.js mcp serves every script as a tool over stdio. Register it as a local MCP server in your client: the stanza is harness-specific (an mcpServers entry in Claude Desktop, Cursor, Claude Code, …) with command: "node", args: ["cli.js", "mcp"], run from this directory. Run node cli.js mcp --help for auth options. Add the stanza yourself if you can edit the client's MCP config; otherwise guide the user. If a local server isn't possible, guide the user to use Zapier's remote MCP servers at https://mcp.zapier.com instead.
Output format
Every script returns a { data, meta } envelope:
data — the script's result (the shape its outputSchema declares; run the script's --help to see that exact schema).
meta.outputDataValidation — what validating data did:
{ skipped: false, droppedPaths: null } — validated, nothing removed.
{ skipped: false, droppedPaths: [...], instruction } — validated, but those paths were stripped from data: fields the script returned from the API that the outputSchema doesn't declare. If you need them, re-run with output validation skipped.
{ skipped: true } — validation was bypassed; data is the raw, unchecked script output.
Reading dropped fields / skipOutputDataValidation. To receive the raw, unvalidated result, append --skipOutputDataValidation to the script invocation. Input validation is never skipped.
Trimming the result / filterOutputData. To shrink a large result down to the fields you need, append --filterOutputData '<jq>' — a jq expression that post-processes data. The jq runs against data only, NOT the { data, meta } envelope, so write it rooted at data (run the script's --help to see its output schema). The transformed value replaces data, meta is preserved, and the result is NOT re-validated against the output schema.
Disambiguation & refusals
- Resolve
chat_id before sending; don't guess. A chat_id is a numeric id (supergroups/channels are -100-prefixed) or a public @username. If the user names a chat you don't have an id for, resolve it with listRecentChats (chats that recently messaged the bot) or getChat (a known id/username). If listRecentChats returns two chats whose names tie on what the user said, stop and ask which one — list each with its type and id. If exactly one matches, act on it; don't over-ask.
- The bot must be reachable. A bot can only message chats it's a member of, and cannot start a private chat — the user must message the bot first. If a send fails with "bot can't initiate conversation" or "chat not found", say so and stop; don't retry against a different chat.
- Declined operations. This connector does not create/manage chats, ban or promote members, manage invite links, upload local files (provide an HTTPS URL or a Telegram
file_id instead), or run games/payments. If asked for one of these, say it's unsupported — don't substitute another tool and report success for an action you didn't perform.
References
Load the matching reference file before working in that area:
| Reference | Covers | Load it when |
|---|
| references/telegram-api-gotchas.md | HTML vs MarkdownV2 escaping, file URL size limits, getFile 1-hour links, copying vs forwarding, deleting/pinning messages, building polls, ok:false/error_code/retry_after/migrate_to_chat_id error envelope, rate limits | Before sending formatted text, uploading/downloading files, copying vs forwarding, deleting/pinning messages, building polls, or handling API errors and rate limits. |