GitHub for mobile is now available
Learn more about GitHub for mobile—including highlights of its core features and how to get started.

At Universe, we announced GitHub for mobile as a fully-native GitHub experience on iOS and Android. Now, you can stay in touch with your team, triage issues, and even merge code, right from your mobile device, anywhere.
Your response to the beta has been incredible—beta testers have commented on, reviewed, and merged nearly one hundred thousand pull requests in the last few weeks alone. And there’s been tens of thousands of team interactions since we first released the beta for download. Today, both the iOS and Android versions of GitHub for mobile are out of beta and generally available. Get the app from the Google Play or App Store.
Triage and more, anywhere
With GitHub mobile, you can:
- Organize tasks in a swipe: Get your inbox to zero in no time—swipe to finish a task or save the notification to return to it later.
- Give feedback and respond to issues: Respond to comments while you’re on the go.
- Review and merge pull requests: Merge and mark pull requests to breeze through your workflow, wherever you are.
With GitHub for mobile, you get a more seamless notification experience, whether you’re at your desk or on the go—now featuring our newest updates to notifications.
Get the app
GitHub for mobile is available today from Google Play or the App Store for individual plans, Team, and Enterprise Cloud. We’re working hard to add features and APIs so we can support Enterprise Server later this year.
There’s a lot more to come, so don’t forget to check back as we continue to make GitHub for mobile even better.
Learn more about GitHub for mobile
Tags:
Written by
Related posts

GitHub Availability Report: September 2025
In September, we experienced three incidents that resulted in degraded performance across GitHub services.

The developer role is evolving. Here’s how to stay ahead.
AI is changing how software gets built. Explore the skills you need to keep up and stand out.

How GitHub protects developers from copyright enforcement overreach
Why the U.S. Supreme Court case Cox v. Sony matters for developers and sharing updates to our Transparency Center and Acceptable Use Policies.