# Article Name 3 Ways to Add Users to Groups in Google Workspace # Article Summary Explore three methods for adding users to Google Workspace groups, helping admins streamline access and team communication # Original HTML URL on Toriihq.com https://www.toriihq.com/articles/how-to-add-user-to-groups-google-workspace # Details Managing who can see what in Google Workspace gets tricky fast, especially when teams shift or projects spin up overnight. Groups are the admin’s shortcut for keeping access tidy. This guide shows three straightforward ways to add people to a group, so you can move from clicking around to getting work done. Pick the method that fits your day. ## Use Google Workspace's UI This walkthrough uses the Google Admin console to place a user in an existing group. The same steps apply whether you add one address or several. ### Step 1: Sign in to the Admin console - Go to admin.google.com. - Sign in with an account assigned the Groups administrator or super administrator role. ### Step 2: Open the Groups list - On the left, click Directory. - Choose Groups. The page lists all groups in the domain and shows the member count for each. ### Step 3: Pick the group you want to update - Click the group’s name. The group's dashboard appears with tabs like Members, Settings, and Labels. ### Step 4: Add new members - Select the Members tab. - In the top-right corner, click the blue person-plus icon labeled Add members. - In the Add members window: - Type a full email address or start typing a name and choose from the suggestions. - Repeat for each person you’re adding (up to 100 at a time). - For Role, leave Member or switch to Manager or Owner if the person needs extra permissions. ### Step 5: Save your changes - Click Add to group. Google confirms the update and, if enabled for the domain, sends a welcome email to each new member. ### Step 6: Double-check membership - You’re returned to the Members tab. - Scan the list or use the search bar to be sure the new names are present. That’s it. Google says the change processes in minutes, so the new members can start using the group almost immediately. ## Use Torii Many admins skip Google Workspace and lean on Torii [https://www.toriihq.com/], a SaaS management platform, to manage group membership instead. The tool pulls subscription data, handles onboarding and off-boarding, shows costs, and syncs integrations in one dashboard. Set the task to run in Torii and the platform updates Google Workspace as soon as a trigger fires, whether that trigger is a new hire, a departure, or an upcoming renewal, which removes endless manual tweaks. To add a user to Google Workspace groups from within Torii, follow these steps: ### 1. Sign up for Torii Contact Torii [https://www.toriihq.com/] and request a complimentary two-week proof of concept. ### 2. Connect your Google Workspace account to Torii Once your Torii environment is live, connect the Google Workspace tenant to Torii by following these Google Workspace integration instructions [https://support.toriihq.com/hc/en-us/articles/5165001141019]. ### 3. Create a Torii workflow for Google Workspace Inside Torii, open the Workflows tab, add the trigger you need, then pick the action that drops the user into the right Google Workspace group. From that moment, every time the trigger criteria match, Google Workspace updates automatically. ## Use Google Workspace's API Below you’ll find the precise API calls for adding a user to a Google Workspace group. No screens or guesswork, just the endpoints and payloads you need. ### Step 1. Get an access token with the right scope Google’s Admin SDK needs an OAuth 2.0 token that carries the https://www.googleapis.com/auth/admin.directory.group.member scope. - If you use a service account, create a signed JWT, impersonate an admin with domain-wide delegation, then exchange the JWT for an access token at https://oauth2.googleapis.com/token. - If you use the installed-app flow, send the user through the normal OAuth consent screen and keep the refresh token handy. Either way, save the resulting bearer token as ACCESSTOKEN. You'll pass it in the Authorization header on every Directory API call that follows from this setup. ### Step 2. Build the request body For this call, you only need two JSON fields total. Keeping the body lean reduces the chance of validation errors and makes logs easier to scan. Options for role are MEMBER, OWNER, or MANAGER. ### Step 3. Call members.insert To add the user, send a POST request to the group’s members collection. The endpoint combines the group address with /members, so you don’t have to look up a numeric ID. A 200 OK response returns the new Member resource. The id value is handy for future updates. Keep that ID around if you plan to change roles later or remove the member in a cleanup job. ### Step 4. Confirm the add (optional but smart) hit the members.get endpoint using the same access token. A quick lookup here can save you from chasing ghost errors down the line during bulk imports. If the user shows up, the job’s done. If you get a 404, double-check the group key, email, and token scope. ### Step 5. Handle common errors - 403 insufficientPermissions means the token is missing the group member scope or the admin account lacks rights. - 400 duplicate pops up when the user is already in the group. - 404 notFound often signals a typo in the group address. Log these errors, alert the caller if needed, and move on to the next user in the queue. That wraps it up; skip the UI and add users to groups with a single API call. ## Torii for SaaS Management Struggling to bring order to your growing SaaS stack? Torii’s SaaS Management Platform cuts through the noise, revealing what you have and what it costs. - Uncover shadow IT: AI continually sweeps your organization to spot unapproved apps, all in real time. - Reduce spend: Trim budgets by eliminating idle licenses and overlapping tools. - Automate onboarding/offboarding: Offload repetitive IT workflows, cutting both effort and risk of mistakes. - Never miss a renewal: Get proactive alerts before contracts expire. Torii is the first unified SaaS Management Platform, giving Finance, IT, and Security teams a single source of truth. For a closer look at how it works and what it can save you, visit Torii [https://www.toriihq.com].