About access permissions on GitHub
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.
Roles work differently for different types of accounts. For more information about accounts, see Types of GitHub accounts.
Personal accounts
A repository owned by a personal account has two permission levels: the repository owner and collaborators. For more information, see Permission levels for a personal account repository.
Organization accounts
Organization members can have owner or member roles. Owners have complete administrative access to your organization. Member is the default role for everyone else. You can manage access permissions for multiple members at a time with teams. For more information, see:
- Roles in an organization
- Project (classic) permissions for an organization
- Repository roles for an organization
- About organization teams
Enterprise accounts
Enterprise accounts have a range of predefined roles that define users' access to the enterprise settings. You can also create custom enterprise roles to define your own sets of fine-grained permissions.
For more information, see Abilities of roles in an enterprise.