| name | create-subagents |
| description | ALWAYS invoke this skill when creating, editing, or configuring subagents. NEVER create subagents without this skill. |
Invoke the develop:agent-prompt-standards skill before proceeding. If that skill is unavailable, report the missing skill and continue with the closest available workflow.
A subagent configured for an isolated, focused role — its system prompt, tool access, and isolated-workflow orchestration.
<quick_start>
- Run
/agents command
- Select "Create New Agent"
- Choose product-scope (
.claude/agents/) or user-scope (~/.claude/agents/)
- Define the subagent:
- name: lowercase-with-hyphens
- description: When should this subagent be used?
- tools: Optional comma-separated list (inherits all if omitted)
- model: Optional (
opus, sonnet, haiku, or inherit)
- skills: Optional array of skill names to inject at startup
- Write the system prompt (the subagent's instructions)
Read `${CLAUDE_SKILL_DIR}/references/subagents.md` for complete subagent file examples and field references.
<file_structure>
<claude_storage_locations>
Priority order:
- Product:
.claude/agents/ for the current product
- CLI:
--agents flag for the current session
- User:
~/.claude/agents/ for all projects
- Plugin: plugin
agents/ directory for all projects
</claude_storage_locations>
Product-scope subagents override user-scope when names conflict.
</file_structure>
- Lowercase letters and hyphens only
- Must be unique
- Natural language description of purpose
- Include when Claude should invoke this subagent
- Used for automatic subagent selection
- Comma-separated list:
Read, Write, Edit, Bash, Grep
- If omitted: inherits all tools from main thread
- Use
/agents interface to see all available tools
- `opus`, `sonnet`, `haiku`, or `inherit`
- Prefer an explicit model alias when reproducibility matters.
- Use `sonnet` for verification, audit, review, and evidence-producing agents.
- Use `haiku` only when the owning workflow accepts lower-cost execution for simple or high-volume tasks.
- NEVER use `inherit` for verification, audit, review, or other reproducibility-sensitive agents.
- Array of skill names to inject into the subagent's context at startup
- The full SKILL.md content of each listed skill is loaded before the subagent runs
- Subagents do NOT inherit skills from the parent conversation — list every needed skill explicitly
- The subagent receives skill content as reference material, not as dynamically invocable skills
- If omitted: no skills injected
skills:
- audit-typescript
- testing
<execution_model>
<critical_constraint>
Subagents are black boxes that cannot interact with users.
Subagents run in isolated contexts and return their final output to the main conversation. They:
- ✅ Can use tools like Read, Write, Edit, Bash, Grep, Glob
- ✅ Can access MCP servers and other non-interactive tools
- ❌ Cannot use AskUserQuestion or any tool requiring user interaction
- ❌ Cannot present options or wait for user input
- ❌ User never sees isolated-workflow intermediate steps
The main conversation sees only the isolated workflow's final report/output.
</critical_constraint>
<workflow_design>
Designing workflows with subagents:
Use main chat for:
- Gathering requirements from user (AskUserQuestion)
- Presenting options or decisions to user
- Any task requiring user confirmation/input
- Work where user needs visibility into progress
Use subagents for:
- Research tasks (API documentation lookup, code analysis)
- Code generation based on pre-defined requirements
- Analysis and reporting (security review, test coverage)
- Context-heavy operations that don't need user interaction
Example workflow pattern:
Main Chat: Ask user for requirements (AskUserQuestion)
↓
subagent: Research API and create documentation (no user interaction)
↓
Main Chat: Review research with user, confirm approach
↓
subagent: Generate code based on confirmed plan
↓
Main Chat: Present results, handle testing/deployment
</workflow_design>
</execution_model>
<system_prompt_guidelines>
Clearly define the subagent's role, capabilities, and constraints.
Structure the system prompt with pure XML tags. Remove ALL markdown headings from the body.
---
name: security-reviewer
description: Reviews code for security vulnerabilities
tools: Read, Grep, Glob, Bash
model: sonnet
---
<role>
Claude is a senior code reviewer specializing in security.
</role>
<focus_areas>
- SQL injection vulnerabilities
- XSS attack vectors
- Authentication/authorization issues
- Sensitive data exposure
</focus_areas>
<workflow>
1. Read the modified files
2. Identify security risks
3. Provide specific remediation steps
4. Rate severity (Critical/High/Medium/Low)
</workflow>
Tailor instructions to the specific task domain. Don't create generic "helper" subagents.
❌ Bad: "Helpful assistant for code"
✅ Good: "Claude is a React component refactoring specialist. Analyze components for hooks best practices, performance anti-patterns, and accessibility issues."
</system_prompt_guidelines>
<configured_agent_xml_structure>
subagent file bodies are system prompts consumed by the target runtime. Like skills and slash commands, they should use pure XML structure for parsing and token efficiency.
<recommended_tags>
Common tags for subagent structure:
<role> - Who the subagent is and what it does
<constraints> - Hard rules (NEVER/MUST/ALWAYS)
<focus_areas> - What to prioritize
<workflow> - Step-by-step process
<output_format> - How to structure deliverables
<success_criteria> - Completion criteria
<validation> - How to verify work
</recommended_tags>
<intelligence_rules>
Simple subagents (single focused task):
- Use role + constraints + workflow minimum
- Example: code-reviewer, test-runner
Medium subagents (multi-step process):
- Add workflow steps, output_format, success_criteria
- Example: api-researcher, documentation-generator
Complex subagents (research + generation + validation):
- Add all tags as appropriate including validation, examples
- Example: mcp-api-researcher, comprehensive-auditor
</intelligence_rules>
<critical_rule>
Remove ALL markdown headings (##, ###) from subagent body. Use semantic XML tags instead.
Keep markdown formatting WITHIN content (bold, italic, lists, code blocks, links).
For XML structure principles and token efficiency details, read /skill-standards — the same principles apply to subagents.
</critical_rule>
</configured_agent_xml_structure>
Claude automatically selects subagents based on the `description` field when it matches the current task.
Explicitly invoke a subagent:
> Use the code-reviewer subagent to check my recent changes
> Have the test-writer subagent create tests for the new API endpoints
Run /agents for an interactive interface to:
- View all available subagents
- Create new subagents
- Edit existing subagents
- Delete custom subagents
</using_agents_command>
<manual_editing>
Edit subagent files directly:
- Product:
.claude/agents/subagent-name.md
- User:
~/.claude/agents/subagent-name.md
</manual_editing>
**Core references**:
- subagents.md: file format, configuration, skill injection, model selection, tool security, prompt caching, complete examples.
- write-subagent-prompts.md: prompt structure, description routing, extended thinking, security constraints, success criteria.
- evaluation-and-testing.md: evaluation metrics, testing strategies, evaluation-driven development, G-Eval.
- error-handling-and-recovery.md: failure causes, recovery strategies, observability, anti-patterns.
- context-management.md: memory architecture, context strategies, long-running tasks, prompt caching.
- orchestration-patterns.md: sequential, parallel, hierarchical, and coordinator patterns with model-selection guidance.
- debugging-agents.md: logging, tracing, hallucinations, format errors, tool misuse, diagnostic procedures.
<failure_modes>
Failure: Runtime-specific examples made SKILL.md exceed the line budget
What happened: Claude added target-specific TOML/YAML examples directly to this SKILL.md until the authored source exceeded /skill-standards' 500-line cap.
Why it failed: The fast path stopped being an overview and absorbed detail that belongs in references.
How to avoid: Keep SKILL.md under 500 lines; move extended examples and configuration matrices to the cited references, then run wc -l "${CLAUDE_SKILL_DIR}/SKILL.md" before audit.
</failure_modes>
<success_criteria>
A well-configured subagent has:
-
Valid YAML frontmatter (name matches file, description includes triggers)
-
Clear role definition in system prompt
-
Appropriate tool restrictions (least privilege)
-
XML-structured system prompt with role, approach, and constraints
-
Description field optimized for automatic routing
-
At least one verification run or documented dry-run against the subagent's intended workflow
-
Model selection appropriate for task complexity, cost, and reproducibility needs
</success_criteria>