Roles

When adding members to your organization, you can give them a default role. This role will apply to any content that inherits its permissions from the organization.

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Understanding default roles is key to getting the most out of how GitBook handles permission management.

See our documentation on permissions and inheritance for a full overview of how permissions cascade throughout content in GitBook.

Roles in GitBook

Roles are how you define the level of access and control that members have over content (and the organization, in the case of admins).

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Each role gets progressively higher levels of access as you move up the list. Let’s start at the lowest access and work our way up:

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The guest role is a very specific role in GitBook. Guests are members that have no default organization role. A guest acts as a standard user in every other regard, they just need to have their permissions set explicitly at a content level.

Inviting a guest to the organization means that they’ll only ever see content they’ve been directly added to. This is great if you want to add external stakeholders or contractors to your organization, but don’t want to worry about giving them access to any content by default.

Guest members count toward the total number of members in an organization for billing purposes.

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A reader is the most basic role in GitBook: it gives read-only access.

Reader seats are paid for organizations on all plans.

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Commenters have the same read-only access as readers, but they’re also able to leave comments against content and spaces (find out more about how that works in our comments documentation).

Commenter is one of our two advanced member roles, available only on the Pro or Enterprise plan.

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Editors are able to read and comment, just like a commenter, but they’re also able to edit content in a couple of ways. Firstly, for spaces that are open for live edits, editors can edit the content directly. Secondly, for spaces that have live edits locked, editors can create and submit change requests. Editors cannot merge change requests.

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Reviewers have all the same permissions as an editor however, they can also merge their own and others’ change requests.

Reviewer is one of our two advanced member roles, available only on the Pro or Enterprise plan.

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Creators are essentially content-level admins. They have all the same permissions as a reviewer, however they can also create and delete spaces, collections and sites, merge change requests and manage permissions at a content level.

If a creator is also a creator or admin in another GitBook organization, they have the ability to move content between organizations.

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An admin is like a super-user for your organization — they have full access! Set someone as an admin if you’re comfortable with them making changes that can impact billing, managing members, and generally just being in control of all areas of the organization.

If an admin is also a creator or admin in another GitBook organization, they have the ability to move content between organizations.

The Reader role vs public docs readers

The Reader role is an invited, paid seat in your organization. Public docs readers don’t need an invite and don’t use paid seats.

Reader role (organization member)

The Reader role is a member of your organization who:

  • Has been invited

  • Consumes a paid seat

  • Can access published and unpublished content they have permission for.

Public docs reader (site visitor)

A public docs reader is someone who:

  • Is not a member of your organization

  • Doesn’t need an invite

  • Doesn’t consume a paid seat

  • Can only access what’s published on the docs site.

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