GitHub Copilot: Organization-Level Usage Metrics Dashboard in Public Preview
GitHub has released an organization-level Copilot usage metrics dashboard in public preview, making usage analytics available directly to organization owners without requiring enterprise-level access. Previously, this visibility was restricted to enterprise administrators only. Organization owners and users with a custom "View Organization Copilot Metrics" permission can now access the dashboard independently, supporting both enterprise-owned organizations and standalone Free or Team organizations.
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Copilot Usage Analytics Now Available at the Organization Level
GitHub has expanded access to its Copilot usage metrics dashboard, making organization-scoped analytics available in public preview. Before this change, detailed usage data for Copilot was restricted to enterprise-level reporting, requiring organizations to rely on enterprise administrators to surface adoption and usage trends. The new dashboard removes that dependency and gives organization owners direct visibility into how Copilot is being used across their teams.
What the Dashboard Shows
The dashboard surfaces organization-scoped Copilot usage metrics for members of the organization. This includes adoption trends, active user counts, and engagement patterns across Copilot's IDE features. It is accessible through GitHub's existing insights infrastructure, consistent with other organization-level analytics in the platform.
Who Can Access It
Access is governed by two roles. First, organization owners automatically have access. Second, users with custom roles that include the "View Organization Copilot Metrics" permission are granted access as well — this allows organizations to delegate reporting to team leads or managers without granting full owner privileges.
The dashboard is available for all organization types: enterprise-owned organizations and standalone Free or Team organizations both qualify.
An Important Caveat for Enterprise Members
For organizations that are part of an enterprise, organization-level totals will not match enterprise-level totals. This is by design: a developer can belong to multiple organizations, so their usage is counted once per organization they are a member of. The enterprise-level view deduplicates this, while the organization-level view does not. Teams should keep this in mind when comparing metrics across reporting levels.