Neon now supports OpenTelemetry! You can send metrics and Postgres logs from Neon to any OpenTelemetry-compatible backend. You can enable the integration from the Integrations page in the Neon Console. For setup instructions, refer to our OpenTelemetry docs, with example configuration for New Relic.
Data API now available in beta for all Neon users
The Neon Data API is now in open beta for all users. Instantly turn your Neon Postgres database into a REST API. No backend required. Query tables, views, and functions right from your client app using standard HTTP verbs (GET, POST, PATCH, DELETE), powered by PostgREST.
We've improved our onboarding to make it easier to get Neon Auth and RLS set up as needed to safely use the Data API in your app.
API key-based authentication for the Neon MCP Server
The Neon MCP Server now supports API key-based authentication for remote access, in addition to OAuth. This allows for simpler authentication using your Neon API key (personal or organization) for programmatic access.
To improve ease-of-use, we've added a time selection option to date-time selectors in the Neon Console.
Drizzle Studio update
Drizzle Studio, which powers the Tables page in the Neon Console, has been updated to version 1.0.22. For details about the latest updates, see the Neon Drizzle Studio Changelog.
app.build — now available via Homebrew
Last week, we introduced app.build, our open-source reference implementation for building AI-powered applications on top of Neon. Unlike LLMs that generate isolated snippets, app.build uses agent architecture to turn prompts into fully deployed, production-ready applications — complete with frontend, backend, and a Neon Postgres database.
This week, in addition to installing app.build using npx, you can now install it using Homebrew.
📌 We also fixed an issue where newly built apps could flicker between the “Under Construction” page and the actual app. Apps now load consistently.
Neon MCP homepage & streamable HTTP support
Neon MCP Server now has a homepage — We’ve launched a new homepage for the Neon MCP Server at mcp.neon.tech, making it easier to understand what the MCP Server does and what tools it supports.
Streamable HTTP support — The Neon MCP Server now supports streamable HTTP as an alternative to Server-Sent Events (SSE) for streaming responses. This makes it easier to consume streamed data in environments where SSE is not ideal — such as CLI tools, backend services, or AI agents. To use streamable HTTP, make sure to use the latest remote MCP server, and specify the https://mcp.neon.tech/mcp endpoint.
We updated the Instant point-in-time restore time selector component on the Backup & Restore page. The new selector makes it a little easier to select the restore point time and date.
Fixed an issue in the console that prevented shared projects from being displayed.