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Best OpenClaw Skills for Productivity and Automation (2026)

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OpenClaw becomes genuinely useful the moment you give it skills. On its own, the agent can hold a conversation. 

With the right skills installed, it can run your calendar, triage your inbox, research a topic, and touch your codebase, all from a single chat message.

Below is a curated list of the skills that consistently show up across community rankings and hands-on reviews, grouped by what they help you do.

Install one at a time, test it, and build from there rather than adding all of them on day one.

A quick note before the list: installing a skill does not lock you out of a tool you have not added yet. 

Your agent can already reach anything logged into your browser, and skills teach it to use specific tools more effectively rather than gatekeeping access to them.

These fourteen OpenClaw skills for productivity and automation are grouped into five categories below: everyday organization, research and automation, developer workflows, a few fun extras, and one skill dedicated purely to making the agent smarter over time.

Everyday Productivity and Organization

Calendar Sync

This skill lets your agent read, create, and edit events directly on your Google Calendar or Apple Calendar. Ask it to find a free hour next week, and it books the meeting itself, handling scheduling conflicts without you switching apps. It can also automatically reshuffle a day when a meeting runs long or gets cancelled.

Email Assistant

Connected to Gmail or Outlook through OAuth, this skill drafts, sends, and searches your email on command. 

Ask for a morning summary of unread messages, and it separates what needs a reply today from what can wait. Over time, it learns which senders deserve a fast reply and which can sit until later.

Notion

A favorite among writers and knowledge workers, this skill syncs structured notes, meeting summaries, and databases straight from your conversation. Instead of copying a summary into Notion by hand, you ask the agent to log it, and it appears in the right database, formatted the way your workspace already expects.

Task Tracker

This skill connects to tools like Todoist or Linear, letting you generate tasks, set due dates, and pull a pending-item summary through a simple chat prompt. It turns a scattered mental list into a tracked one without opening a separate app, and a quick status check becomes a single message instead of a login.

Research and Automation

Tavily Web Search

Built for researchers and content creators, this skill gives your agent live web crawling designed specifically for AI context, which cuts down on the vague or outdated answers a general search sometimes returns.

Browser Control

This is the backbone of any data-collection workflow. With it, your agent can navigate websites on its own, fill out forms, scrape structured data, and take screenshots, handling tasks that would otherwise mean hours of manual browsing. Competitor price checks and lead research both lean heavily on this one skill.

Summarize

This skill compresses large documents, including PDFs, text files, and Word documents, down to the exact information you need. Feed it a lengthy report and ask for the three takeaways instead of reading forty pages yourself, and it holds up just as well on a stack of documents as it does on one.

Developer and Technical Workflows

GitHub Integration

This skill lets you review code diffs, manage issues, and merge branches straight from your messaging app. A failed build or an open pull request can reach you as a chat message instead of a forgotten email notification, often with a plain-language explanation of what likely broke.

Database Query

Translate plain English requests into working queries for PostgreSQL or MySQL. Ask how many signups happened last week and get the number back without writing the SQL yourself, which is especially handy for anyone on a team who is comfortable with data but not with query syntax.

N8N Workflow

For anyone already leaning on workflow automation, this skill wires your agent into a local N8N instance, giving you subscription-free automation across dozens of connected apps instead of paying for a separate hosted workflow tool. Built-in scheduling through cron jobs covers a lot of what people usually pay a separate service for.

Useful Extras Worth Exploring

YouTube Summarizer

Point this at any video link and get back a clean transcript and summary, handy for pulling quotes, writing show notes, or deciding if a video is worth watching in full before committing twenty minutes to it. Content creators use it constantly to turn one long video into headlines, hashtags, and short clips of copy.

Model Usage Tracker

If you run more than one AI provider behind your agent, this skill gives you a simple way to see usage broken down by provider, so a surprise bill does not catch you off guard at the end of the month. It also makes it easier to spot when a task is quietly burning through a more expensive model than it needs.

Home Assistant

For anyone running a smart home setup, this skill connects your agent to Home Assistant so you can control lights, thermostats, and other devices through plain language instead of a separate app. Combined with a scheduling skill, it can also run routines automatically at set times of day.

Continuous Improvement

Self-Improving Agent

This skill adds a layer of learning on top of OpenClaw’s own memory, tracking errors, lessons, and feature requests over time. Power users treat this as close to essential, since it means the agent gets noticeably sharper the longer you run it. Rather than repeating the same correction every week, the agent keeps a record and adjusts on its own.

Where to Start if You Are New

If this list feels like a lot, start with three skills: Email Assistant, Calendar Sync, and Summarize. 

Together, they cover the tasks most people repeat every single day, and none of them require deep technical setup beyond a standard OAuth connection.

Once those feel routine, move into whichever category matches your actual work, research tools for content and analysis, developer skills if you write code, or the smart home and media extras if your priority is a more capable personal assistant rather than a work tool.

A Quick Word on Safety

Before installing any community skill, take a moment to read through its instructions and any accompanying scripts. 

Look for anything that sends data somewhere unexpected or asks for information it has no reason to need. 

Individual developers upload skills, so treat each one the way you would treat a new dependency in a codebase, not something to install blindly just because it looks popular.

A few practical habits help here. Check when a skill was last updated before installing it, since active maintenance usually means fewer bugs. 

Favor skills with a longer track record and a genuine download count over ones that just appeared, and when in doubt, ask your agent to explain what a skill does in plain language before you approve the install.

This carries more weight with OpenClaw than with most software, since skills can carry file access, API keys, and account permissions all at once. 

A few minutes of review before installing is a small price for avoiding a much larger cleanup later.

Final Thoughts

You do not need all fourteen of these running at once to feel the difference. 

Pick two or three that match tasks you already do every week, whether that is clearing your inbox, tracking a project board, or researching a topic, and let those prove their worth before adding more.

The skills that stick tend to be the ones tied to a task you were already dreading. 

Start there, watch how the agent handles it over a week or two, and only then decide which category to tackle next, whether that is research, development, or the fun extras.

If you are running these skills around the clock rather than only when your laptop happens to be open, the server behind your agent deserves the same attention as the skills themselves. 

A dependable, affordable VPS keeps everything online and isolated from your personal files, and it is worth comparing plans before you build out your full skill stack.

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