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vercel-cli-with-tokens
Deploy and manage projects on Vercel using token-based authentication. Use when working with Vercel CLI using access tokens rather than interactive login — e.g. "deploy to vercel", "set up vercel", "add environment variables to vercel".
vercel-labs
Mar 23, 2026
vercel-labs/agent-skills

SKILL.md

skills/vercel-cli-with-tokens/SKILL.md

YAML Frontmatter5 lines
Frontmatter
name: vercel-cli-with-tokens
description: Deploy and manage projects on Vercel using token-based authentication. Use when working with Vercel CLI using access tokens rather than interactive login — e.g. "deploy to vercel", "set up vercel", "add environment variables to vercel".
metadata:
  author: vercel
  version: "1.0.0"

Vercel CLI with Tokens

Deploy and manage projects on Vercel using the CLI with token-based authentication, without relying on vercel login.

Step 1: Locate the Vercel Token

Before running any Vercel CLI commands, identify where the token is coming from. Work through these scenarios in order:

A) VERCEL_TOKEN is already set in the environment

printenv VERCEL_TOKEN

If this returns a value, you're ready. Skip to Step 2.

B) Token is in a .env file under VERCEL_TOKEN

grep '^VERCEL_TOKEN=' .env 2>/dev/null

If found, export it:

export VERCEL_TOKEN=$(grep '^VERCEL_TOKEN=' .env | cut -d= -f2-)

C) Token is in a .env file under a different name

Look for any variable that looks like a Vercel token (Vercel tokens typically start with vca_):

grep -i 'vercel' .env 2>/dev/null

Inspect the output to identify which variable holds the token, then export it as VERCEL_TOKEN:

export VERCEL_TOKEN=$(grep '^<VARIABLE_NAME>=' .env | cut -d= -f2-)

D) No token found — ask the user

If none of the above yield a token, ask the user to provide one. They can create a Vercel access token at vercel.com/account/tokens.


Important: Once VERCEL_TOKEN is exported as an environment variable, the Vercel CLI reads it natively — do not pass it as a --token flag. Putting secrets in command-line arguments exposes them in shell history and process listings.

# Bad — token visible in shell history and process listings
vercel deploy --token "vca_abc123"

# Good — CLI reads VERCEL_TOKEN from the environment
export VERCEL_TOKEN="vca_abc123"
vercel deploy

Step 2: Locate the Project and Team

Similarly, check for the project ID and team scope. These let the CLI target the right project without needing vercel link.

# Check environment
printenv VERCEL_PROJECT_ID
printenv VERCEL_ORG_ID

# Or check .env
grep -i 'vercel' .env 2>/dev/null

If you have a project URL (e.g. https://vercel.com/my-team/my-project), extract the team slug:

# e.g. "my-team" from "https://vercel.com/my-team/my-project"
echo "$PROJECT_URL" | sed 's|https://vercel.com/||' | cut -d/ -f1

If you have both VERCEL_ORG_ID and VERCEL_PROJECT_ID in your environment, export them — the CLI will use these automatically and skip any .vercel/ directory:

export VERCEL_ORG_ID="<org-id>"
export VERCEL_PROJECT_ID="<project-id>"

Note: VERCEL_ORG_ID and VERCEL_PROJECT_ID must be set together — setting only one causes an error.

CLI Setup

Ensure the Vercel CLI is installed:

npm install -g vercel
vercel --version

Deploying a Project

Always deploy as preview unless the user explicitly requests production. Choose a method based on what you have available.

Quick Deploy (have project ID — no linking needed)

When VERCEL_TOKEN and VERCEL_PROJECT_ID are set in the environment, deploy directly:

vercel deploy -y --no-wait

With a team scope (either via VERCEL_ORG_ID or --scope):

vercel deploy --scope <team-slug> -y --no-wait

Production (only when explicitly requested):

vercel deploy --prod --scope <team-slug> -y --no-wait

Check status:

vercel inspect <deployment-url>

Full Deploy Flow (no project ID — need to link)

Use this when you have a token and team but no pre-existing project ID.

Check project state first

# Does the project have a git remote?
git remote get-url origin 2>/dev/null

# Is it already linked to a Vercel project?
cat .vercel/project.json 2>/dev/null || cat .vercel/repo.json 2>/dev/null

Link the project

With git remote (preferred):

vercel link --repo --scope <team-slug> -y

Reads the git remote and connects to the matching Vercel project. Creates .vercel/repo.json. More reliable than plain vercel link, which matches by directory name.

Without git remote:

vercel link --scope <team-slug> -y

Creates .vercel/project.json.

Link to a specific project by name:

vercel link --project <project-name> --scope <team-slug> -y

If the project is already linked, check orgId in .vercel/project.json or .vercel/repo.json to verify it matches the intended team.

Deploy after linking

A) Git Push Deploy — has git remote (preferred)

Git pushes trigger automatic Vercel deployments.

  1. Ask the user before pushing. Never push without explicit approval.
  2. Commit and push:
   git add .
   git commit -m "deploy: <description of changes>"
   git push
  1. Vercel builds automatically. Non-production branches get preview deployments.
  2. Retrieve the deployment URL:
   sleep 5
   vercel ls --format json --scope <team-slug>

Find the latest entry in the deployments array.

B) CLI Deploy — no git remote

vercel deploy --scope <team-slug> -y --no-wait

Check status:

vercel inspect <deployment-url>

Deploying from a Remote Repository (code not cloned locally)

  1. Clone the repository:
   git clone <repo-url>
   cd <repo-name>
  1. Link to Vercel:
   vercel link --repo --scope <team-slug> -y
  1. Deploy via git push (if you have push access) or CLI deploy.

About .vercel/ Directory

A linked project has either:

  • .vercel/project.json — from vercel link. Contains projectId and orgId.
  • .vercel/repo.json — from vercel link --repo. Contains orgId, remoteName, and a projects map.

Not needed when VERCEL_ORG_ID + VERCEL_PROJECT_ID are both set in the environment.

Do NOT run vercel ls, vercel project inspect, or vercel link in an unlinked directory to detect state — they will interactively prompt or silently link as a side-effect. Only vercel whoami is safe to run anywhere.

Managing Environment Variables

# Set for all environments
echo "value" | vercel env add VAR_NAME --scope <team-slug>

# Set for a specific environment (production, preview, development)
echo "value" | vercel env add VAR_NAME production --scope <team-slug>

# List environment variables
vercel env ls --scope <team-slug>

# Pull env vars to local .env file
vercel env pull --scope <team-slug>

# Remove a variable
vercel env rm VAR_NAME --scope <team-slug> -y

Inspecting Deployments

# List recent deployments
vercel ls --format json --scope <team-slug>

# Inspect a specific deployment
vercel inspect <deployment-url>

# View build logs
vercel logs <deployment-url>

Managing Domains

# List domains
vercel domains ls --scope <team-slug>

# Add a domain to the project
vercel domains add <domain> --scope <team-slug>

Working Agreement

  • Never pass VERCEL_TOKEN as a --token flag. Export it as an environment variable and let the CLI read it natively.
  • Check the environment for tokens before asking the user. Look in the current env and .env files first.
  • Default to preview deployments. Only deploy to production when explicitly asked.
  • Ask before pushing to git. Never push commits without the user's approval.
  • Do not read or modify .vercel/ files directly. The CLI manages this directory.
  • Do not curl/fetch deployed URLs to verify. Just return the link to the user.
  • Use --format json when structured output will help with follow-up steps.
  • Use -y on commands that prompt for confirmation to avoid interactive blocking.

Troubleshooting

Token not found

Check the environment and any .env files present:

printenv | grep -i vercel
grep -i vercel .env 2>/dev/null

Authentication error

If the CLI fails with Authentication required:

  • The token may be expired or invalid.
  • Verify: vercel whoami (uses VERCEL_TOKEN from environment).
  • Ask the user for a fresh token.

Wrong team

Verify the scope is correct:

vercel whoami --scope <team-slug>

Build failure

Check the build logs:

vercel logs <deployment-url>

Common causes:

  • Missing dependencies — ensure package.json is complete and committed.
  • Missing environment variables — add with vercel env add.
  • Framework misconfiguration — check vercel.json. Vercel auto-detects frameworks (Next.js, Remix, Vite, etc.) from package.json; override with vercel.json if detection is wrong.

CLI not installed

npm install -g vercel