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Roles in an organization

Organization owners can assign roles to individuals and teams giving them different sets of permissions in the organization.

About roles

To perform any actions on GitHub, such as creating a pull request in a repository or changing an organization's billing settings, a person must have sufficient access to the relevant account or resource. This access is controlled by permissions. A permission is the ability to perform a specific action. For example, the ability to delete an issue is a permission. A role is a set of permissions you can assign to individuals or teams.

Repository-level roles give organization members, outside collaborators and teams of people varying levels of access to repositories. For more information, see "Repository roles for an organization."

Team-level roles are roles that give permissions to manage a team. You can give any individual member of a team the team maintainer role, which gives the member a number of administrative permissions over a team. For more information, see "Assigning the team maintainer role to a team member."

Organization-level roles are sets of permissions that can be assigned to individuals or teams to manage an organization and the organization's repositories, teams, and settings. For more information about all the roles available at the organization level, see "About organization roles."

About organization roles

You can assign individuals or teams to a variety of organization-level roles to control your members' access to your organization and its resources. For more details about the individual permissions included in each role, see "Permissions for organization roles."

Organization owners

Organization owners have complete administrative access to your organization. This role should be limited, but to no less than two people, in your organization. For more information, see "Maintaining ownership continuity for your organization."

Organization members

The default, non-administrative role for people in an organization is the organization member. By default, organization members have a number of permissions, including the ability to create repositories and project boards.

GitHub App managers

By default, only organization owners can manage the settings of GitHub Apps owned by an organization. To allow additional users to manage GitHub Apps owned by an organization, an owner can grant them GitHub App manager permissions.

When you designate a user as a GitHub App manager in your organization, you can grant them access to manage the settings of some or all GitHub Apps owned by the organization. For more information, see:

Outside collaborators

To keep your organization's data secure while allowing access to repositories, you can add outside collaborators. An outside collaborator is a person who has access to one or more organization repositories but is not explicitly a member of the organization, such as a consultant or temporary employee. For more information, see:

Permissions for organization roles

Organization actionOwnersMembers
Invite people to join the organizationX
Edit and cancel invitations to join the organizationX
Remove members from the organizationX
Reinstate former members to the organizationX
Add and remove people from all teamsX
Promote organization members to team maintainerX
Configure code review assignments (see "Managing code review settings for your team"))X
Add collaborators to all repositoriesX
Access the organization audit logX
Edit the organization's profile page (see "About your organization's profile")X
Delete all teamsX
Delete the organization account, including all repositoriesX
Create teams (see "Setting team creation permissions in your organization")XX
See all organization members and teamsXX
@mention any visible teamXX
Can be made a team maintainerXX
Transfer repositoriesX
Manage an organization's SSH certificate authorities (see "Managing your organization's SSH certificate authorities")X
Create project boards (see "Project board permissions for an organization")XX
View and post public team discussions to all teams (see "About team discussions")XX
View and post private team discussions to all teams (see "About team discussions")X
Edit and delete team discussions in all teams (for more information, see "Managing disruptive comments)X
Hide comments on commits, pull requests, and issues (see "Managing disruptive comments")XX
Disable team discussions for an organization (see "Disabling team discussions for your organization")X
Set a team profile picture in all teams (see "Setting your team's profile picture")X
Manage the publication of GitHub Pages sites from repositories in the organization (see "Managing the publication of GitHub Pages sites for your organization")X
Move teams in an organization's hierarchyX
Pull (read), push (write), and clone (copy) all repositories in the organizationX
Convert organization members to outside collaboratorsX
View people with access to an organization repositoryX
Export a list of people with access to an organization repositoryX
Manage default labels (see "Managing default labels for repositories in your organization")X

Further reading