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Integration GuideNative Integration

GitHub + Microsoft Azure Integration

GitHub and Microsoft Azure are both used by product teams — integrating them removes duplicated status updates and keeps work visible across both tools. GitHub lists it as a native integration, so setup takes minutes rather than Zapier workarounds.

Integration Status

GitHub4.7/5 · 20+ native integrations · Free tier
Microsoft Azure4.4/5 · 20+ native integrations · Free tier

Native integration available

GitHub lists Microsoft Azure as a supported integration. Set it up via GitHub's integrations settings — no third-party automation platform required.

What teams use this integration for

Sync status automatically

When work progresses in GitHub, reflect that change in Microsoft Azure automatically — reducing manual status updates and keeping stakeholders informed without extra effort.

Centralise team notifications

Route GitHub activity — new comments, assignments, and status changes — into Microsoft Azure so your team stays informed in the tool they already have open.

Automate weekly reporting

Pull GitHub velocity, completed tasks, and blockers into Microsoft Azure for weekly team reviews, sprint retrospectives, or stakeholder updates.

Connect planning to delivery

Link GitHub roadmap items to work tracked in Microsoft Azure, giving stakeholders visibility from strategy to shipped — without switching between tools.

How to set it up

  1. Open GitHub's workspace settings and navigate to the Integrations or Apps section — GitHub lists 20+ native integrations.
  2. Search for Microsoft Azure and click Connect or Install. You may need workspace owner or admin permissions in GitHub — check your role under Settings → Members.
  3. Authorise your Microsoft Azure account when prompted. Use the account that owns the resources you want to sync (not a personal account).
  4. Configure the integration: choose which GitHub projects or spaces sync with which Microsoft Azure resources, and select which events trigger notifications or updates.
  5. Test with a real item — create a task in GitHub and verify it appears or triggers correctly in Microsoft Azure before enabling for your full team.
GitHub Full Review →Microsoft Azure Full ReviewCompare GitHub vs Microsoft Azure