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Managing organization settings

Organization owners can change several settings, including the names of repositories that belong to the organization and Owners team membership. In addition, organization owners can delete the organization and all of its repositories.

Verifying or approving a domain for your organization

You can verify your ownership of domains with GitHub to confirm your organization's identity.

Renaming an organization

If your project or company has changed names, you can update the name of your organization to match.

Transferring organization ownership

To make someone else the owner of an organization account, you must add a new owner, ensure that the billing information is updated, and then remove yourself from the account.

Restricting repository creation in your organization

To protect your organization's data, you can configure permissions for creating repositories in your organization.

Setting permissions for deleting or transferring repositories

You can allow organization members with admin permissions to a repository to delete or transfer the repository, or limit the ability to delete or transfer repositories to organization owners only.

Restricting repository visibility changes in your organization

To protect your organization's data, you can configure permissions for changing repository visibility in your organization.

Managing the forking policy for your organization

You can allow or prevent the forking of any private repositories owned by your organization.

Managing pull request reviews in your organization

You can limit which users can approve or request changes to a pull requests in your organization.

Disabling or limiting GitHub Actions for your organization

You can enable, disable, and limit GitHub Actions for an organization.

About networking for hosted compute products in your organization

You can manage private networking for GitHub-hosted products using network configurations in your organization.

About Azure private networking for GitHub-hosted runners in your organization

You can create create a private network configuration for your organization to use GitHub-hosted runners in your Azure Virtual Network(s) (VNET).

Configuring private networking for GitHub-hosted runners in your organization

Learn how to use GitHub-hosted runners with an Azure private network in your organization.

Troubleshooting Azure private network configurations for GitHub-hosted runners in your organization

Learn how to fix common issues while creating Azure private network configurations to use GitHub-hosted runners with an Azure VNET.

Configuring the retention period for GitHub Actions artifacts and logs in your organization

You can configure the retention period for GitHub Actions artifacts and logs in your organization.

Allowing people to delete issues in your organization

Organization owners can allow certain people to delete issues in repositories owned by your organization.

Enabling or disabling GitHub Discussions for an organization

You can use GitHub Discussions in an organization as a place for your organization to have conversations that aren't specific to a single repository within your organization.

Managing discussion creation for repositories in your organization

You can choose the permission levels that members require to create discussions in repositories owned by your organization.

Managing the commit signoff policy for your organization

You can require users to automatically sign off all commits they make in GitHub's web interface to repositories owned by your organization.

Setting team creation permissions in your organization

You can allow all organization members to create teams or limit team creation to organization owners.

Managing scheduled reminders for your organization

You can get reminders in Slack for all pull requests that teams in your organization have been requested to review.

Managing the default branch name for repositories in your organization

You can set the default branch name for repositories that members create in your organization on GitHub.com.

Managing default labels for repositories in your organization

You can customize the labels that are included in every new repository in your organization.

Managing the display of member names in your organization

You can allow members of your organization to see a comment author's profile name in private repositories in the organization.

Managing updates from accounts your organization sponsors

You can manage the email address that receives updates from accounts your organization sponsors.

Managing the publication of GitHub Pages sites for your organization

You can control whether organization members can publish GitHub Pages sites from repositories in the organization.

Archiving an organization

You can archive an organization to make it read-only and indicate that it's no longer actively maintained. You can also unarchive organizations that have been archived.

Deleting an organization account

You can delete your organization account on GitHub.com at any time.

Converting an organization into a user

It's not possible to convert an organization into a personal account, but you can create a new personal account and transfer the organization's repositories to it.

Upgrading to the GitHub Customer Agreement

Organizations can upgrade from the Standard Terms of Service to the GitHub Customer Agreement.

Disabling projects in your organization

Organization owners can turn off organization-wide projects, organization-wide projects (classic), and repository-level projects (classic) in an organization.

Disabling insights for projects in your organization

Organization owners can turn off insights for Projects in their organization.

Managing base permissions for projects

Organization owners can configure a base permission for projects created in their organization.

Allowing project visibility changes in your organization

Organization owners can allow members with admin permissions to adjust the visibility of projects and projects (classic) in their organization.

Managing custom properties for repositories in your organization

With custom properties, you can add metadata to repositories in your organization. You can use those properties to target repositories with rulesets.