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Intercept and customize agent behavior at key execution points with hooks
Hooks are callback functions that run your code in response to agent events, like a tool being called, a session starting, or execution stopping. With hooks, you can:
- Block dangerous operations before they execute, like destructive shell commands or unauthorized file access
- Log and audit every tool call for compliance, debugging, or analytics
- Transform inputs and outputs to sanitize data, inject credentials, or redirect file paths
- Require human approval for sensitive actions like database writes or API calls
- Track session lifecycle to manage state, clean up resources, or send notifications
This guide covers how hooks work, how to configure them, and provides examples for common patterns like blocking tools, modifying inputs, and forwarding notifications.
Something happens during agent execution and the SDK fires an event: a tool is about to be called (`PreToolUse`), a tool returned a result (`PostToolUse`), a subagent started or stopped, the agent is idle, or execution finished. See the [full list of events](#available-hooks). The SDK checks for hooks registered for that event type. This includes callback hooks you pass in `options.hooks` and shell command hooks from settings files, but only if you explicitly load them with [`settingSources`](/en/agent-sdk/typescript#setting-source) or [`setting_sources`](/en/agent-sdk/python#setting-source). If a hook has a [`matcher`](#matchers) pattern (like `"Write|Edit"`), the SDK tests it against the event's target (for example, the tool name). Hooks without a matcher run for every event of that type. Each matching hook's [callback function](#callback-functions) receives input about what's happening: the tool name, its arguments, the session ID, and other event-specific details. After performing any operations (logging, API calls, validation), your callback returns an [output object](#outputs) that tells the agent what to do: allow the operation, block it, modify the input, or inject context into the conversation.The following example puts these steps together. It registers a PreToolUse hook (step 1) with a "Write|Edit" matcher (step 3) so the callback only fires for file-writing tools. When triggered, the callback receives the tool's input (step 4), checks if the file path targets a .env file, and returns permissionDecision: "deny" to block the operation (step 5):
async def protect_env_files(input_data, tool_use_id, context): # Extract the file path from the tool's input arguments file_path = input_data["tool_input"].get("file_path", "") file_name = file_path.split("/")[-1]
# Block the operation if targeting a .env file
if file_name == ".env":
return {
"hookSpecificOutput": {
"hookEventName": input_data["hook_event_name"],
"permissionDecision": "deny",
"permissionDecisionReason": "Cannot modify .env files",
}
}
# Return empty object to allow the operation
return {}
async def main(): options = ClaudeAgentOptions( hooks={ # Register the hook for PreToolUse events # The matcher filters to only Write and Edit tool calls "PreToolUse": [HookMatcher(matcher="Write|Edit", hooks=[protect_env_files])] } )
async with ClaudeSDKClient(options=options) as client:
await client.query("Update the database configuration")
async for message in client.receive_response():
# Filter for assistant and result messages
if isinstance(message, (AssistantMessage, ResultMessage)):
print(message)
asyncio.run(main())
```typescript TypeScript theme={null}
import { query, HookCallback, PreToolUseHookInput } from "@anthropic-ai/claude-agent-sdk";
// Define a hook callback with the HookCallback type
const protectEnvFiles: HookCallback = async (input, toolUseID, { signal }) => {
// Cast input to the specific hook type for type safety
const preInput = input as PreToolUseHookInput;
// Cast tool_input to access its properties (typed as unknown in the SDK)
const toolInput = preInput.tool_input as Record<string, unknown>;
const filePath = toolInput?.file_path as string;
const fileName = filePath?.split("/").pop();
// Block the operation if targeting a .env file
if (fileName === ".env") {
return {
hookSpecificOutput: {
hookEventName: preInput.hook_event_name,
permissionDecision: "deny",
permissionDecisionReason: "Cannot modify .env files"
}
};
}
// Return empty object to allow the operation
return {};
};
for await (const message of query({
prompt: "Update the database configuration",
options: {
hooks: {
// Register the hook for PreToolUse events
// The matcher filters to only Write and Edit tool calls
PreToolUse: [{ matcher: "Write|Edit", hooks: [protectEnvFiles] }]
}
}
})) {
// Filter for assistant and result messages
if (message.type === "assistant" || message.type === "result") {
console.log(message);
}
}
The SDK provides hooks for different stages of agent execution. Some hooks are available in both SDKs, while others are TypeScript-only.
| Hook Event | Python SDK | TypeScript SDK | What triggers it | Example use case |
|---|---|---|---|---|
PreToolUse |
Yes | Yes | Tool call request (can block or modify) | Block dangerous shell commands |
PostToolUse |
Yes | Yes | Tool execution result | Log all file changes to audit trail |
PostToolUseFailure |
Yes | Yes | Tool execution failure | Handle or log tool errors |
UserPromptSubmit |
Yes | Yes | User prompt submission | Inject additional context into prompts |
Stop |
Yes | Yes | Agent execution stop | Save session state before exit |
SubagentStart |
Yes | Yes | Subagent initialization | Track parallel task spawning |
SubagentStop |
Yes | Yes | Subagent completion | Aggregate results from parallel tasks |
PreCompact |
Yes | Yes | Conversation compaction request | Archive full transcript before summarizing |
PermissionRequest |
Yes | Yes | Permission dialog would be displayed | Custom permission handling |
SessionStart |
No | Yes | Session initialization | Initialize logging and telemetry |
SessionEnd |
No | Yes | Session termination | Clean up temporary resources |
Notification |
Yes | Yes | Agent status messages | Send agent status updates to Slack or PagerDuty |
Setup |
No | Yes | Session setup/maintenance | Run initialization tasks |
TeammateIdle |
No | Yes | Teammate becomes idle | Reassign work or notify |
TaskCompleted |
No | Yes | Background task completes | Aggregate results from parallel tasks |
ConfigChange |
No | Yes | Configuration file changes | Reload settings dynamically |
WorktreeCreate |
No | Yes | Git worktree created | Track isolated workspaces |
WorktreeRemove |
No | Yes | Git worktree removed | Clean up workspace resources |
To configure a hook, pass it in the hooks field of your agent options (ClaudeAgentOptions in Python, the options object in TypeScript):
async with ClaudeSDKClient(options=options) as client: await client.query("Your prompt") async for message in client.receive_response(): print(message)
```typescript TypeScript theme={null}
for await (const message of query({
prompt: "Your prompt",
options: {
hooks: {
PreToolUse: [{ matcher: "Bash", hooks: [myCallback] }]
}
}
})) {
console.log(message);
}
The hooks option is a dictionary (Python) or object (TypeScript) where:
- Keys are hook event names (e.g.,
'PreToolUse','PostToolUse','Stop') - Values are arrays of matchers, each containing an optional filter pattern and your callback functions
Use matchers to filter when your callbacks fire. The matcher field is a regex string that matches against a different value depending on the hook event type. For example, tool-based hooks match against the tool name, while Notification hooks match against the notification type. See the Claude Code hooks reference for the full list of matcher values for each event type.
| Option | Type | Default | Description |
|---|---|---|---|
matcher |
string |
undefined |
Regex pattern matched against the event's filter field. For tool hooks, this is the tool name. Built-in tools include Bash, Read, Write, Edit, Glob, Grep, WebFetch, Agent, and others (see Tool Input Types for the full list). MCP tools use the pattern mcp__<server>__<action>. |
hooks |
HookCallback[] |
- | Required. Array of callback functions to execute when the pattern matches |
timeout |
number |
60 |
Timeout in seconds |
Use the matcher pattern to target specific tools whenever possible. A matcher with 'Bash' only runs for Bash commands, while omitting the pattern runs your callbacks for every occurrence of the event. Note that for tool-based hooks, matchers only filter by tool name, not by file paths or other arguments. To filter by file path, check tool_input.file_path inside your callback.
MCP tool naming: MCP tools always start with mcp__ followed by the server name and action: mcp__<server>__<action>. For example, if you configure a server named playwright, its tools will be named mcp__playwright__browser_screenshot, mcp__playwright__browser_click, etc. The server name comes from the key you use in the mcpServers configuration.
Every hook callback receives three arguments:
- Input data: a typed object containing event details. Each hook type has its own input shape (for example,
PreToolUseHookInputincludestool_nameandtool_input, whileNotificationHookInputincludesmessage). See the full type definitions in the TypeScript and Python SDK references.- All hook inputs share
session_id,cwd, andhook_event_name. agent_idandagent_typeare populated when the hook fires inside a subagent. In TypeScript, these are on the base hook input and available to all hook types. In Python, they are onPreToolUse,PostToolUse, andPostToolUseFailureonly.
- All hook inputs share
- Tool use ID (
str | None/string | undefined): correlatesPreToolUseandPostToolUseevents for the same tool call. - Context: in TypeScript, contains a
signalproperty (AbortSignal) for cancellation. In Python, this argument is reserved for future use.
Your callback returns an object with two categories of fields:
- Top-level fields control the conversation:
systemMessageinjects a message into the conversation visible to the model, andcontinue(continue_in Python) determines whether the agent keeps running after this hook. hookSpecificOutputcontrols the current operation. The fields inside depend on the hook event type. ForPreToolUsehooks, this is where you setpermissionDecision("allow","deny", or"ask"),permissionDecisionReason, andupdatedInput. ForPostToolUsehooks, you can setadditionalContextto append information to the tool result.
Return {} to allow the operation without changes. SDK callback hooks use the same JSON output format as Claude Code shell command hooks, which documents every field and event-specific option. For the SDK type definitions, see the TypeScript and Python SDK references.
By default, the agent waits for your hook to return before proceeding. If your hook performs a side effect (logging, sending a webhook) and doesn't need to influence the agent's behavior, you can return an async output instead. This tells the agent to continue immediately without waiting for the hook to finish:
```python Python theme={null} async def async_hook(input_data, tool_use_id, context): # Start a background task, then return immediately asyncio.create_task(send_to_logging_service(input_data)) return {"async_": True, "asyncTimeout": 30000} ```const asyncHook: HookCallback = async (input, toolUseID, { signal }) => {
// Start a background task, then return immediately
sendToLoggingService(input).catch(console.error);
return { async: true, asyncTimeout: 30000 };
};| Field | Type | Description |
|---|---|---|
async |
true |
Signals async mode. The agent proceeds without waiting. In Python, use async_ to avoid the reserved keyword. |
asyncTimeout |
number |
Optional timeout in milliseconds for the background operation |
This example intercepts Write tool calls and rewrites the file_path argument to prepend /sandbox, redirecting all file writes to a sandboxed directory. The callback returns updatedInput with the modified path and permissionDecision: 'allow' to auto-approve the rewritten operation:
if input_data["tool_name"] == "Write":
original_path = input_data["tool_input"].get("file_path", "")
return {
"hookSpecificOutput": {
"hookEventName": input_data["hook_event_name"],
"permissionDecision": "allow",
"updatedInput": {
**input_data["tool_input"],
"file_path": f"/sandbox{original_path}",
},
}
}
return {}
```typescript TypeScript theme={null}
const redirectToSandbox: HookCallback = async (input, toolUseID, { signal }) => {
if (input.hook_event_name !== "PreToolUse") return {};
const preInput = input as PreToolUseHookInput;
const toolInput = preInput.tool_input as Record<string, unknown>;
if (preInput.tool_name === "Write") {
const originalPath = toolInput.file_path as string;
return {
hookSpecificOutput: {
hookEventName: preInput.hook_event_name,
permissionDecision: "allow",
updatedInput: {
...toolInput,
file_path: `/sandbox${originalPath}`
}
}
};
}
return {};
};
This example blocks any attempt to write to the /etc directory and uses two output fields together: permissionDecision: 'deny' stops the tool call, while systemMessage injects a reminder into the conversation so the agent receives context about why the operation was blocked and avoids retrying it:
if file_path.startswith("/etc"):
return {
# Top-level field: inject guidance into the conversation
"systemMessage": "Remember: system directories like /etc are protected.",
# hookSpecificOutput: block the operation
"hookSpecificOutput": {
"hookEventName": input_data["hook_event_name"],
"permissionDecision": "deny",
"permissionDecisionReason": "Writing to /etc is not allowed",
},
}
return {}
```typescript TypeScript theme={null}
const blockEtcWrites: HookCallback = async (input, toolUseID, { signal }) => {
const preInput = input as PreToolUseHookInput;
const toolInput = preInput.tool_input as Record<string, unknown>;
const filePath = toolInput?.file_path as string;
if (filePath?.startsWith("/etc")) {
return {
// Top-level field: inject guidance into the conversation
systemMessage: "Remember: system directories like /etc are protected.",
// hookSpecificOutput: block the operation
hookSpecificOutput: {
hookEventName: preInput.hook_event_name,
permissionDecision: "deny",
permissionDecisionReason: "Writing to /etc is not allowed"
}
};
}
return {};
};
By default, the agent may prompt for permission before using certain tools. This example auto-approves read-only filesystem tools (Read, Glob, Grep) by returning permissionDecision: 'allow', letting them run without user confirmation while leaving all other tools subject to normal permission checks:
read_only_tools = ["Read", "Glob", "Grep"]
if input_data["tool_name"] in read_only_tools:
return {
"hookSpecificOutput": {
"hookEventName": input_data["hook_event_name"],
"permissionDecision": "allow",
"permissionDecisionReason": "Read-only tool auto-approved",
}
}
return {}
```typescript TypeScript theme={null}
const autoApproveReadOnly: HookCallback = async (input, toolUseID, { signal }) => {
if (input.hook_event_name !== "PreToolUse") return {};
const preInput = input as PreToolUseHookInput;
const readOnlyTools = ["Read", "Glob", "Grep"];
if (readOnlyTools.includes(preInput.tool_name)) {
return {
hookSpecificOutput: {
hookEventName: preInput.hook_event_name,
permissionDecision: "allow",
permissionDecisionReason: "Read-only tool auto-approved"
}
};
}
return {};
};
Hooks execute in the order they appear in the array. Keep each hook focused on a single responsibility and chain multiple hooks for complex logic:
```python Python theme={null} options = ClaudeAgentOptions( hooks={ "PreToolUse": [ HookMatcher(hooks=[rate_limiter]), # First: check rate limits HookMatcher(hooks=[authorization_check]), # Second: verify permissions HookMatcher(hooks=[input_sanitizer]), # Third: sanitize inputs HookMatcher(hooks=[audit_logger]), # Last: log the action ] } ) ```const options = {
hooks: {
PreToolUse: [
{ hooks: [rateLimiter] }, // First: check rate limits
{ hooks: [authorizationCheck] }, // Second: verify permissions
{ hooks: [inputSanitizer] }, // Third: sanitize inputs
{ hooks: [auditLogger] } // Last: log the action
]
}
};Use regex patterns to match multiple tools. This example registers three matchers with different scopes: the first triggers file_security_hook only for file modification tools, the second triggers mcp_audit_hook for any MCP tool (tools whose names start with mcp__), and the third triggers global_logger for every tool call regardless of name:
const options = {
hooks: {
PreToolUse: [
// Match file modification tools
{ matcher: "Write|Edit|Delete", hooks: [fileSecurityHook] },
// Match all MCP tools
{ matcher: "^mcp__", hooks: [mcpAuditHook] },
// Match everything (no matcher)
{ hooks: [globalLogger] }
]
}
};Use SubagentStop hooks to monitor when subagents finish their work. See the full input type in the TypeScript and Python SDK references. This example logs a summary each time a subagent completes:
options = ClaudeAgentOptions( hooks={"SubagentStop": [HookMatcher(hooks=[subagent_tracker])]} )
```typescript TypeScript theme={null}
import { HookCallback, SubagentStopHookInput } from "@anthropic-ai/claude-agent-sdk";
const subagentTracker: HookCallback = async (input, toolUseID, { signal }) => {
// Cast to SubagentStopHookInput to access subagent-specific fields
const subInput = input as SubagentStopHookInput;
// Log subagent details when it finishes
console.log(`[SUBAGENT] Completed: ${subInput.agent_id}`);
console.log(` Transcript: ${subInput.agent_transcript_path}`);
console.log(` Tool use ID: ${toolUseID}`);
console.log(` Stop hook active: ${subInput.stop_hook_active}`);
return {};
};
const options = {
hooks: {
SubagentStop: [{ hooks: [subagentTracker] }]
}
};
Hooks can perform asynchronous operations like HTTP requests. Catch errors inside your hook instead of letting them propagate, since an unhandled exception can interrupt the agent.
This example sends a webhook after each tool completes, logging which tool ran and when. The hook catches errors so a failed webhook doesn't interrupt the agent:
```python Python theme={null} import asyncio import json import urllib.request from datetime import datetimedef _send_webhook(tool_name): """Synchronous helper that POSTs tool usage data to an external webhook.""" data = json.dumps( { "tool": tool_name, "timestamp": datetime.now().isoformat(), } ).encode() req = urllib.request.Request( "https://api.example.com/webhook", data=data, headers={"Content-Type": "application/json"}, method="POST", ) urllib.request.urlopen(req)
async def webhook_notifier(input_data, tool_use_id, context): # Only fire after a tool completes (PostToolUse), not before if input_data["hook_event_name"] != "PostToolUse": return {}
try:
# Run the blocking HTTP call in a thread to avoid blocking the event loop
await asyncio.to_thread(_send_webhook, input_data["tool_name"])
except Exception as e:
# Log the error but don't raise. A failed webhook shouldn't stop the agent
print(f"Webhook request failed: {e}")
return {}
```typescript TypeScript theme={null}
import { query, HookCallback, PostToolUseHookInput } from "@anthropic-ai/claude-agent-sdk";
const webhookNotifier: HookCallback = async (input, toolUseID, { signal }) => {
// Only fire after a tool completes (PostToolUse), not before
if (input.hook_event_name !== "PostToolUse") return {};
try {
await fetch("https://api.example.com/webhook", {
method: "POST",
headers: { "Content-Type": "application/json" },
body: JSON.stringify({
tool: (input as PostToolUseHookInput).tool_name,
timestamp: new Date().toISOString()
}),
// Pass signal so the request cancels if the hook times out
signal
});
} catch (error) {
// Handle cancellation separately from other errors
if (error instanceof Error && error.name === "AbortError") {
console.log("Webhook request cancelled");
}
// Don't re-throw. A failed webhook shouldn't stop the agent
}
return {};
};
// Register as a PostToolUse hook
for await (const message of query({
prompt: "Refactor the auth module",
options: {
hooks: {
PostToolUse: [{ hooks: [webhookNotifier] }]
}
}
})) {
console.log(message);
}
Use Notification hooks to receive system notifications from the agent and forward them to external services. Notifications fire for specific event types: permission_prompt (Claude needs permission), idle_prompt (Claude is waiting for input), auth_success (authentication completed), and elicitation_dialog (Claude is prompting the user). Each notification includes a message field with a human-readable description and optionally a title.
This example forwards every notification to a Slack channel. It requires a Slack incoming webhook URL, which you create by adding an app to your Slack workspace and enabling incoming webhooks:
```python Python theme={null} import asyncio import json import urllib.requestfrom claude_agent_sdk import ClaudeSDKClient, ClaudeAgentOptions, HookMatcher
def _send_slack_notification(message): """Synchronous helper that sends a message to Slack via incoming webhook.""" data = json.dumps({"text": f"Agent status: {message}"}).encode() req = urllib.request.Request( "https://hooks.slack.com/services/YOUR/WEBHOOK/URL", data=data, headers={"Content-Type": "application/json"}, method="POST", ) urllib.request.urlopen(req)
async def notification_handler(input_data, tool_use_id, context): try: # Run the blocking HTTP call in a thread to avoid blocking the event loop await asyncio.to_thread(_send_slack_notification, input_data.get("message", "")) except Exception as e: print(f"Failed to send notification: {e}")
# Return empty object. Notification hooks don't modify agent behavior
return {}
async def main(): options = ClaudeAgentOptions( hooks={ # Register the hook for Notification events (no matcher needed) "Notification": [HookMatcher(hooks=[notification_handler])], }, )
async with ClaudeSDKClient(options=options) as client:
await client.query("Analyze this codebase")
async for message in client.receive_response():
print(message)
asyncio.run(main())
```typescript TypeScript theme={null}
import { query, HookCallback, NotificationHookInput } from "@anthropic-ai/claude-agent-sdk";
// Define a hook callback that sends notifications to Slack
const notificationHandler: HookCallback = async (input, toolUseID, { signal }) => {
// Cast to NotificationHookInput to access the message field
const notification = input as NotificationHookInput;
try {
// POST the notification message to a Slack incoming webhook
await fetch("https://hooks.slack.com/services/YOUR/WEBHOOK/URL", {
method: "POST",
headers: { "Content-Type": "application/json" },
body: JSON.stringify({
text: `Agent status: ${notification.message}`
}),
// Pass signal so the request cancels if the hook times out
signal
});
} catch (error) {
if (error instanceof Error && error.name === "AbortError") {
console.log("Notification cancelled");
} else {
console.error("Failed to send notification:", error);
}
}
// Return empty object. Notification hooks don't modify agent behavior
return {};
};
// Register the hook for Notification events (no matcher needed)
for await (const message of query({
prompt: "Analyze this codebase",
options: {
hooks: {
Notification: [{ hooks: [notificationHandler] }]
}
}
})) {
console.log(message);
}
- Verify the hook event name is correct and case-sensitive (
PreToolUse, notpreToolUse) - Check that your matcher pattern matches the tool name exactly
- Ensure the hook is under the correct event type in
options.hooks - For non-tool hooks like
StopandSubagentStop, matchers match against different fields (see matcher patterns) - Hooks may not fire when the agent hits the
max_turnslimit because the session ends before hooks can execute
Matchers only match tool names, not file paths or other arguments. To filter by file path, check tool_input.file_path inside your hook:
const myHook: HookCallback = async (input, toolUseID, { signal }) => {
const preInput = input as PreToolUseHookInput;
const toolInput = preInput.tool_input as Record<string, unknown>;
const filePath = toolInput?.file_path as string;
if (!filePath?.endsWith(".md")) return {}; // Skip non-markdown files
// Process markdown files...
return {};
};- Increase the
timeoutvalue in theHookMatcherconfiguration - Use the
AbortSignalfrom the third callback argument to handle cancellation gracefully in TypeScript
- Check all
PreToolUsehooks forpermissionDecision: 'deny'returns - Add logging to your hooks to see what
permissionDecisionReasonthey're returning - Verify matcher patterns aren't too broad (an empty matcher matches all tools)
-
Ensure
updatedInputis insidehookSpecificOutput, not at the top level:return { hookSpecificOutput: { hookEventName: "PreToolUse", permissionDecision: "allow", updatedInput: { command: "new command" } } };
-
You must also return
permissionDecision: 'allow'for the input modification to take effect -
Include
hookEventNameinhookSpecificOutputto identify which hook type the output is for
SessionStart and SessionEnd can be registered as SDK callback hooks in TypeScript, but are not available in the Python SDK (HookEvent omits them). In Python, they are only available as shell command hooks defined in settings files (for example, .claude/settings.json). To load shell command hooks from your SDK application, include the appropriate setting source with setting_sources or settingSources:
const options = {
settingSources: ["project"] // Loads .claude/settings.json including hooks
};To run initialization logic as a Python SDK callback instead, use the first message from client.receive_response() as your trigger.
When spawning multiple subagents, each one may request permissions separately. Subagents do not automatically inherit parent agent permissions. To avoid repeated prompts, use PreToolUse hooks to auto-approve specific tools, or configure permission rules that apply to subagent sessions.
A UserPromptSubmit hook that spawns subagents can create infinite loops if those subagents trigger the same hook. To prevent this:
- Check for a subagent indicator in the hook input before spawning
- Use a shared variable or session state to track whether you're already inside a subagent
- Scope hooks to only run for the top-level agent session
The systemMessage field adds context to the conversation that the model sees, but it may not appear in all SDK output modes. If you need to surface hook decisions to your application, log them separately or use a dedicated output channel.
- Claude Code hooks reference: full JSON input/output schemas, event documentation, and matcher patterns
- Claude Code hooks guide: shell command hook examples and walkthroughs
- TypeScript SDK reference: hook types, input/output definitions, and configuration options
- Python SDK reference: hook types, input/output definitions, and configuration options
- Permissions: control what your agent can do
- Custom tools: build tools to extend agent capabilities