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Managing your personal access tokens

You can use a personal access token in place of a password when authenticating to GitHub in the command line or with the API.

Warning: Treat your access tokens like passwords. For more information, see "Keeping your personal access tokens secure."

About personal access tokens

Personal access tokens are an alternative to using passwords for authentication to GitHub Enterprise Cloud when using the GitHub API or the command line.

Personal access tokens are intended to access GitHub resources on behalf of yourself. To access resources on behalf of an organization, or for long-lived integrations, you should use a GitHub App. For more information, see "About creating GitHub Apps."

Types of personal access tokens

GitHub currently supports two types of personal access tokens: fine-grained personal access tokens and personal access tokens (classic). GitHub recommends that you use fine-grained personal access tokens instead of personal access tokens (classic) whenever possible.

Both fine-grained personal access tokens and personal access tokens (classic) are tied to the user who generated them and will become inactive if the user loses access to the resource.

Organization owners can set a policy to restrict the access of personal access tokens (classic) to their organization, and enterprise owners can restrict the access of personal access tokens (classic) to the enterprise or organizations owned by the enterprise. For more information, see "Setting a personal access token policy for your organization."

Fine-grained personal access tokens

Fine-grained personal access tokens have several security advantages over personal access tokens (classic):

  • Each token can only access resources owned by a single user or organization.
  • Each token can only access specific repositories.
  • Each token is granted specific permissions, which offer more control than the scopes granted to personal access tokens (classic).
  • Each token must have an expiration date.
  • Organization owners can require approval for any fine-grained personal access tokens that can access resources in the organization.
  • Enterprise owners can require approval for any fine-grained personal access tokens that can access resources in organizations owned by the enterprise.

Personal access tokens (classic)

Personal access tokens (classic) are less secure. However, some features currently will only work with personal access tokens (classic):

  • Only personal access tokens (classic) have write access for public repositories that are not owned by you or an organization that you are not a member of.
  • Only personal access tokens (classic) automatically have write access for internal repositories that are owned by your enterprise. Fine-grained personal access tokens must be granted access to internal repositories.
  • Outside collaborators can only use personal access tokens (classic) to access organization repositories that they are a collaborator on.
  • Only personal access tokens (classic) can access enterprises. (Fine-grained personal access token can access organizations owned by enterprises.)
  • A few REST API endpoints are only available with a personal access tokens (classic). To check whether an endpoint also supports fine-grained personal access tokens, see the documentation for that endpoint, or see "Endpoints available for fine-grained personal access tokens".

If you choose to use a personal access token (classic), keep in mind that it will grant access to all repositories within the organizations that you have access to, as well as all personal repositories in your personal account.

As a security precaution, GitHub automatically removes personal access tokens that haven't been used in a year. To provide additional security, we highly recommend adding an expiration to your personal access tokens.

Keeping your personal access tokens secure

Personal access tokens are like passwords, and they share the same inherent security risks. Before creating a new personal access token, consider if there is a more secure method of authentication available to you:

  • To access GitHub from the command line, you can use GitHub CLI or Git Credential Manager instead of creating a personal access token.
  • When using a personal access token in a GitHub Actions workflow, consider whether you can use the built-in GITHUB_TOKEN instead. For more information, see "Automatic token authentication."

If these options are not possible, and you must create a personal access token, consider using another CLI service to store your token securely.

When using a personal access token in a script, you can store your token as a secret and run your script through GitHub Actions. For more information, see "Using secrets in GitHub Actions." You can also store your token as a Codespaces secret and run your script in Codespaces. For more information, see "Managing your account-specific secrets for GitHub Codespaces."

For more information about best practices, see "Keeping your API credentials secure."

Creating a fine-grained personal access token

Note: Fine-grained personal access token are currently in beta and subject to change. To leave feedback, see the feedback discussion.

  1. Verify your email address, if it hasn't been verified yet.

  2. In the upper-right corner of any page, click your profile photo, then click Settings.

    Screenshot of a user's account menu on GitHub. The menu item "Settings" is outlined in dark orange.

  3. In the left sidebar, click Developer settings.

  4. In the left sidebar, under Personal access tokens, click Fine-grained tokens.

  5. Click Generate new token.

  6. Under Token name, enter a name for the token.

  7. Under Expiration, select an expiration for the token.

  8. Optionally, under Description, add a note to describe the purpose of the token.

  9. Under Resource owner, select a resource owner. The token will only be able to access resources owned by the selected resource owner. Organizations that you are a member of will not appear unless the organization opted in to fine-grained personal access tokens. For more information, see "Setting a personal access token policy for your organization." You may be required to perform SAML single sign-on (SSO) if the selected organization requires it and you do not already have an active SAML session.

  10. Optionally, if the resource owner is an organization that requires approval for fine-grained personal access tokens, below the resource owner, in the box, enter a justification for the request.

  11. Under Repository access, select which repositories you want the token to access. You should choose the minimal repository access that meets your needs. Tokens always include read-only access to all public repositories on GitHub.

  12. If you selected Only select repositories in the previous step, under the Selected repositories dropdown, select the repositories that you want the token to access.

  13. Under Permissions, select which permissions to grant the token. Depending on which resource owner and which repository access you specified, there are repository, organization, and account permissions. You should choose the minimal permissions necessary for your needs.

    The REST API reference document for each endpoint states whether the endpoint works with fine-grained personal access tokens and states what permissions are required in order for the token to use the endpoint. Some endpoints may require multiple permissions, and some endpoints may require one of multiple permissions. For an overview of which REST API endpoints a fine-grained personal access token can access with each permission, see "Permissions required for fine-grained personal access tokens."

  14. Click Generate token.

If you selected an organization as the resource owner and the organization requires approval for fine-grained personal access tokens, then your token will be marked as pending until it is reviewed by an organization administrator. Your token will only be able to read public resources until it is approved. If you are an owner of the organization, your request is automatically approved. For more information, see "Reviewing and revoking personal access tokens in your organization."

Creating a personal access token (classic)

Note: Organization owners can restrict the access of personal access token (classic) to their organization. If you try to use a personal access token (classic) to access resources in an organization that has disabled personal access token (classic) access, your request will fail with a 403 response. Instead, you must use a GitHub App, OAuth app, or fine-grained personal access token.

Note: Your personal access token (classic) can access every repository that you can access. GitHub recommends that you use fine-grained personal access tokens instead, which you can restrict to specific repositories. Fine-grained personal access tokens also enable you to specify fine-grained permissions instead of broad scopes.

  1. Verify your email address, if it hasn't been verified yet.

  2. In the upper-right corner of any page, click your profile photo, then click Settings.

    Screenshot of a user's account menu on GitHub. The menu item "Settings" is outlined in dark orange.

  3. In the left sidebar, click Developer settings.

  4. In the left sidebar, under Personal access tokens, click Tokens (classic).

  5. Select Generate new token, then click Generate new token (classic).

  6. In the "Note" field, give your token a descriptive name.

  7. To give your token an expiration, select Expiration, then choose a default option or click Custom to enter a date.

  8. Select the scopes you'd like to grant this token. To use your token to access repositories from the command line, select repo. A token with no assigned scopes can only access public information. For more information, see "Scopes for OAuth apps."

  9. Click Generate token.

  10. Optionally, to copy the new token to your clipboard, click .

    Screenshot of the "Personal access tokens" page. Next to a blurred-out token, an icon of two overlapping squares is outlined in orange.

  11. To use your token to access resources owned by an organization that uses SAML single sign-on, authorize the token. For more information, see "Authorizing a personal access token for use with SAML single sign-on."

Deleting a personal access token

You should delete a personal access token if it is no longer needed. If you delete a personal access token that was used to create a deploy key, the deploy key will also be deleted.

  1. In the upper-right corner of any page, click your profile photo, then click Settings.

    Screenshot of a user's account menu on GitHub. The menu item "Settings" is outlined in dark orange.

  2. In the left sidebar, click Developer settings.

  3. In the left sidebar, under Personal access tokens, click either Fine-grained tokens or Tokens (classic), depending on which type of personal access token you'd like to delete.

  4. To the right of the personal access token you want to delete, click Delete.

Using a personal access token on the command line

Once you have a personal access token, you can enter it instead of your password when performing Git operations over HTTPS.

For example, to clone a repository on the command line you would enter the following git clone command. You would then be prompted to enter your username and password. When prompted for your password, enter your personal access token instead of a password.

$ git clone https://github.com/USERNAME/REPO.git
Username: YOUR_USERNAME
Password: YOUR_PERSONAL_ACCESS_TOKEN

Personal access tokens can only be used for HTTPS Git operations. If your repository uses an SSH remote URL, you will need to switch the remote from SSH to HTTPS.

If you are not prompted for your username and password, your credentials may be cached on your computer. You can update your credentials in the Keychain to replace your old password with the token.

Instead of manually entering your personal access token for every HTTPS Git operation, you can cache your personal access token with a Git client. Git will temporarily store your credentials in memory until an expiry interval has passed. You can also store the token in a plain text file that Git can read before every request. For more information, see "Caching your GitHub credentials in Git."

Further reading