GitHub has announced that all of its paid plans now include unlimited private repositories. GitHub continues to be free for public and open source projects.
These are the following ways to pay for GitHub.com: Personal developer plans at $7 per month: Organization plans at $9 per user per month or $25/month for the first five users; and Enterprise plans are $21 per user per month.
Developer Plan: For developers using GitHub for private projects, now there’s just one paid plan which includes unlimited private repositories for $7 per month. No matter what a developer was paying previously, the cost now includes as many repositories as needed to work on projects in private and includes the ability to invite collaborators. Github will start moving all paid accounts to the new plan. For those developers currently paying for one of those larger plans, they will receive a prorated credit on their account.
Organization Plan: Offers unlimited collaborators. For those currently paying for one of one of the old organization plans, they will have the option to upgrade to unlimited private repositories at any time, but are not immediately required to do so.
Enterprise Plan: Host a team’s code on a company’s servers or in a private cloud with existing security controls. Included are source code management, code review, issue tracking, admin dashboards and support. Plans are sold in packs of 10 users and billed annually. GitHub is currently offering a 45-day free trial of the plan.