Google Tasks

· #166 most-used

Task lists automated — agents create, update, and close items for you

ProductivityProjectsSchedulingAutomationEmail

Google Tasks is Google's native lightweight to-do tool — lists that live inside Gmail, Calendar, and every Google Workspace surface. Connect it to Actionist and your agents can create tasks from emails, close them when CRM deals close, retrieve entire lists for reporting, and react instantly to new or completed items — all without you opening the Google Tasks pane.

Average time saved
10 hours
per person · per month
1 workdays back

Eliminates manual work. Agents handle capturing action items from emails and Slack, updating records when deals close, and sweeping completed items — work that previously required constant tab-switching.

Schedule

What your Google Tasks agent runs on autopilot

A week of scheduled jobs your Actionist agent will execute on your behalf.

28Scheduled jobs
7Agents at work
24/7Always on
Agents
TueThu
Tue
Wed
Thu
7a
8a
9a
10a
11a
12p
1p
2p
3p
4p
5p
6p
Multi-app workflows

Google Tasks × every other app you use

End-to-end automations that span multiple apps — each one a real business outcome.

6Workflows
9Apps spanned
~37 hrsSaved / week
6Personas served
For customer success
Featured4 apps

Support ticket resolved — tasks closed in seconds

When a Gmail support email is marked resolved, your agent checks for any open Google Tasks tied to that thread, marks them complete, posts a wrap-up note in Slack, and drops a follow-up review event on the customer success calendar — all before the rep has switched windows. No task lingers past its ticket. No follow-up falls through the cracks.

~8 hrs / week

Time saved for your team — every week, on autopilot

The flow
Trigger·When a Gmail support thread is labelled 'Resolved'
Result
Update task status to completedPost resolution summary to #customer-successCreate 30-day follow-up review event
The win
Saved per run
12 min
Runs / week
~40×
Zero orphaned support tasks
Driven byCustomer Support Agent
ROI

Savings

What your team gets back — two angles: what you stop doing manually, and what that's worth.

Without Actionist

What you do manually today

With Actionist

What your agent runs for you

  • Sales
    18 min / week
    Manual CRM-to-task sync

    Rep copies new HubSpot lead details into a Google Tasks follow-up item by hand — once or twice per morning, more on busy days.

    Sales Agent
    0 min
    Agent creates follow-up tasks on lead creation

    When a new lead enters HubSpot, the agent runs Find or Create Task and sets the due date automatically — reps open the day with tasks already in queue.

  • Marketing
    13 min / week
    Campaign checklist built by hand

    Marketer manually creates a Google Tasks list per campaign and adds standard checklist items each time a new initiative kicks off.

    Marketing Agent
    0 min
    Agent seeds campaign task list on launch

    When a new campaign is created in HubSpot, the agent creates the task list and populates standard items in seconds — every campaign starts from the same baseline.

  • Customer Support
    18 min / week
    Ticket-to-task transcription

    Support agent copies escalated Zendesk ticket details into a Google Tasks item so it appears in the shared team queue alongside in-progress work.

    Customer Support Agent
    0 min
    Agent routes escalations directly to shared list

    When a ticket is escalated, the agent adds a task to the support queue with ticket ID and description — no copy-paste, no lag, no missed escalations.

  • Human Resources
    7 min / week
    Onboarding list created manually

    HR coordinator creates a new Google Tasks list for each hire and types in the standard 12-item onboarding checklist one by one.

    Human Resources Agent
    0 min
    Agent provisions onboarding list on hire record

    When a new hire record is activated, the agent creates the onboarding list and seeds all standard tasks automatically — HR just assigns ownership.

  • Finance
    13 min / week
    Invoice chase tasks entered manually

    Finance team member reviews upcoming invoices and manually creates a Google Tasks item for each one approaching its due date.

    Finance Agent
    0 min
    Agent creates and dates chase tasks from invoice data

    When invoice due dates are logged in Notion, the agent creates a 'Chase payment' task with the correct due date — no invoice slips through without a task.

  • Operations
    25 min / week
    Request queue updated by hand

    Ops coordinator checks the operations Google Sheet for new rows and manually adds a corresponding task to the shared Google Tasks queue for each request.

    Operations Agent
    0 min
    Agent syncs sheet rows to task queue instantly

    When a new row lands in the ops sheet, the agent checks for duplicates and creates a task with all relevant fields — the queue is always current, no coordinator required.

  • Legal
    6 min / week
    Contract deadline tasks added by hand

    Legal team member reads new contract uploads, extracts renewal or deadline dates, and manually creates a Google Tasks reminder for each.

    Legal Agent
    0 min
    Agent creates deadline tasks from contract uploads

    When a contract is added to Google Drive, the agent creates a task with the key deadline as the due date and the filename in notes — no deadline missed due to a missed entry.

+ 100s of other Google Tasks automations
Average monthly
10 hrs / person / month
Average monthly
10 hrs / person / month
Calculator

Calculate what your team saves

Team size
10 people
Hourly rate
$20 / hr
Hours saved / week
25
Hours saved / year
1,250
Annual ROI
$25,000

Based on Google Tasks's typical team usage — the visible tasks plus a few other automations the agent runs: ~2.5 hrs / person / week of admin work automated.

Connect

How to plug Google Tasks into Actionist

Pick the connection method that suits your environment.

The fastest path to Google Tasks automation. Install one of the Google Tasks MCP servers and the agent reaches your task lists through a permissioned OAuth handshake — no API tokens to generate or rotate.

1
Open the Apps tab

Find Google Tasks in the Apps library and click Connect. MCP is selected by default.

2
Authorise in Google Tasks

A Google OAuth consent screen opens. Sign in with the Google account whose tasks you want to automate and grant the requested Tasks scope. Your credentials stay in Google — Actionist only holds the access token.

3
Test the connection

Actionist runs a read-only call to verify the handshake. You're ready.

Actions

15 actions your agent can call

Read and write operations available to your Actionist agent.

Triggers

6 events your agent can react to

Events your agent watches for, and the actions it kicks off in response.

Skills

Skills that pair with Google Tasks

Reusable agent skills that work well alongside this app.

Google Tasks

Connects directly to the Google Tasks REST API with managed OAuth — gives agents full CRUD access to tasks and task lists without any manual credential management.

MCP servers

MCP servers that work with Google Tasks

Connect Actionist to MCP servers built for or around this app.

arpitbatra123/mcp-googletasks

Community MCP server that exposes Google Tasks API actions — create, list, update, and delete tasks and task lists.

Google Tasks MCP Server
Official

A context-efficient MCP server for Google Tasks, optimised to keep token usage low across multi-step task workflows.

zcaceres/gtasks-mcp

Lightweight MCP server for managing Google Tasks — covers task and list operations via the standard Google Tasks API.

FAQs

Questions about Google Tasks + Actionist

How do I connect Google Tasks to Actionist?
Open the Apps tab, find Google Tasks, and click Connect. The default MCP path opens a Google OAuth consent screen — sign in, grant the Tasks scope, and Actionist verifies the connection with a read-only call. The whole flow takes under two minutes and no API key is needed.
Which Google Tasks objects can agents read and write?
Agents can fully manage two objects: Tasks (create, read, update, delete, move, clear completed) and Task Lists (create, read all, delete). There is no native sub-task or attachment support in the Google Tasks API, so those fields are not available to agents.
Do I need a Google Cloud project or API key to connect?
For the recommended MCP path, no — OAuth handles authentication and you never touch Google Cloud Console. If you choose the API Token method instead, you will need a Google Cloud project with the Tasks API enabled and a credential (API key or service-account key) generated from the Credentials page.
Can agents react to new or completed tasks as they happen?
Yes. The New Task trigger fires whenever any task is added to your lists, New Completed Task fires when an item is ticked off, and New Task List fires when a list is created. Use these to chain downstream actions — post to Slack, update a spreadsheet, create a calendar event — the moment the Google Tasks event lands.
Can agents use Google Tasks alongside other apps in the same workflow?
Yes — and that's where the value compounds. Agents can pull a trigger from Gmail, create a task in Google Tasks, post to Slack, and block a calendar slot, all in one workflow. Any app in the Actionist library can appear alongside Google Tasks; the step-by-step workflow editor wires them together with no code.
How do I prevent duplicate tasks when a workflow runs multiple times?
Use the Find or Create Task action: it searches by task title first and only creates a new item if no match is found. For stricter dedup, call Find Task explicitly, check the result, and branch the workflow — create if empty, update if found. Never use Create Task alone in a repeating workflow unless duplicates are acceptable.
What are the most useful automation patterns for Google Tasks?
The highest-value patterns are: (1) capturing action items from Gmail, Slack, or form tools directly into Google Tasks so nothing lives only in a notification; (2) closing or updating tasks automatically when the upstream source changes state (deal closed, ticket resolved, invoice paid); (3) seeding standard task lists from project or onboarding triggers so setup is consistent every time.
Can an agent mark a task complete?
Yes — use Update Task or Update a task with the status field set to 'completed'. To close an entire list at once, use Clear completed tasks after all items are done. If you want the agent to close specific tasks by name rather than ID, run Find Task first to get the task ID, then pass it to the update action.