222

My question is: Is it possible to get the azure active directory tenant id without using powershell command?

I found this two blogs and with this help, I'm already able to get the tenant ID and subscriptions ID from powershell. Is it the only way to retrieve the tenant?

Get Windows Azure Active Directory Tenant ID in Windows PowerShell

Windows Azure AD authentication support for PowerShell

Thanks

3
  • Are you looking for an answer in another programming language or are you asking for a non programming response? If the former you need to be more specific. If the ladder you are asking in the wrong forum
    – Matt
    Oct 15, 2014 at 14:13
  • 5
    Found this web site that does the job : whatismytenantid.com Feb 9, 2018 at 18:36
  • 2
    That feeling when 150K+ people got screwed by MS not being able to clearly communicate tenantId
    – eddyP23
    Jan 28, 2019 at 16:28

28 Answers 28

274

Time changes everything. I was looking to do the same recently and came up with this:

Note

added 02/17/2021

Stable Portal Page thanks Palec

added 12/18/2017

As indicated by shadowbq, the DirectoryId and TenantId both equate to the GUID representing the ActiveDirectory Tenant. Depending on context, either term may be used by Microsoft documentation and products, which can be confusing.

Assumptions

  • You have access to the Azure Portal

Solution

The tenant ID is tied to ActiveDirectoy in Azure

  • Navigate to Dashboard
  • Navigate to ActiveDirectory
  • Navigate to Manage / Properties
  • Copy the "Directory ID"

Azure ActiveDirectory Tenant ID:

image

7
  • 6
    I'm not sure about the profit part, but the rest worked for me! ☺ May 3, 2017 at 20:31
  • 42
    The "Tenant ID" IS the "Directory ID".
    – shadowbq
    May 12, 2017 at 20:32
  • 38
    Microsoft sure like to keep people on their toes by naming everything 3 times.
    – BenM
    Oct 20, 2017 at 15:08
  • 1
    What does "Navigate to ActiveDirectory" mean?
    – thang
    Oct 24, 2017 at 16:39
  • 2
    It seems the address of this screen is fairly stable: portal.azure.com/#blade/Microsoft_AAD_IAM/…
    – Palec
    Feb 16, 2021 at 23:15
116

Go to https://login.windows.net/YOURDIRECTORYNAME.onmicrosoft.com/.well-known/openid-configuration and you'll see a bunch of URLs containing your tenant ID.

6
  • 3
    Those ids are the subscription ids - not the tenant ids. When an account has multiple subscriptions, there are multiple directories and the tenantId equates to the directoryId at outlined in the answer by @KevinR below
    – Catch22
    May 18, 2017 at 20:08
  • 5
    You can have multiple subscriptions associated with a single tenant/directory. Using the method above will show you the tenant ID, not subscription ID(s). You can confirm by comparing the GUID from this method with the Directory ID in the portal - they will be the same.
    – BenV
    Jun 15, 2017 at 15:49
  • 6
    super helpful in case you don't have access to the active directory blade Jan 23, 2018 at 16:43
  • 2
    FYI: you can convert a subscription Id to a tenant Id by navigating to management.azure.com/subscriptions/… (hover to see full URL) -- and inspecting the "WWW-Authenticate" header that comes back (you'll get a 401, but that header contains a URL with the tenant Id in it). :-) Apr 16, 2018 at 20:33
  • In azure URL's (like the portal) you can typically use the YOURDIRECTORYNAME.onmicrosoft.com and tenant ID interchangeably - so if you know the directoryname, you can reference the tenant.
    – ndrix
    May 31, 2019 at 5:30
72

My team really got sick of trying to find the tenant ID for our O365 and Azure projects. The devs, the support team, the sales team, everyone needs it at some point and never remembers how to do it.

So we've built this small site in the same vein as whatismyip.com. Hope you find it useful!

How to find my Microsoft 365, Azure or SharePoint Online tenant ID?

1
  • 3
    Brilliant. Why Microsoft makes an effectively public ID so difficult to find is beyond me.
    – Lunatik
    Oct 19, 2021 at 14:20
63

In the Azure CLI (I use GNU/Linux):

$ azure login  # add "-e AzureChinaCloud" if you're using Azure China

This will ask you to login via https://aka.ms/devicelogin or https://aka.ms/deviceloginchina

$ azure account show
info:    Executing command account show
data:    Name                        : BizSpark Plus
data:    ID                          : aZZZZZZZ-YYYY-HHHH-GGGG-abcdef569123
data:    State                       : Enabled
data:    Tenant ID                   : 0XXXXXXX-YYYY-HHHH-GGGG-123456789123
data:    Is Default                  : true
data:    Environment                 : AzureCloud
data:    Has Certificate             : No
data:    Has Access Token            : Yes
data:    User name                   : [email protected]
data:    
info:    account show command OK

or simply:

azure account show --json | jq -r '.[0].tenantId'

or the new az:

az account show --subscription a... | jq -r '.tenantId'
az account list | jq -r '.[].tenantId'

I hope it helps

2
  • 2
    actually, it's the azure cli.. but +1 for any cli.
    – pms1969
    Sep 14, 2016 at 13:52
  • This will also work with the new az CLI, thanks!
    – rsmith54
    Jul 20, 2017 at 18:10
40

The tenant id is also present in the management console URL when you browse to the given Active Directory instance, e.g.,

https://manage.windowsazure.com/<morestuffhere>/ActiveDirectoryExtension/Directory/BD848865-BE84-4134-91C6-B415927B3AB1

Azure Mgmt Console Active Directory

3
  • @Mjh, I hear you. I'm surprised you're the first person to comment on my klugey suggestion. Maybe it's obvious to the rest of the world that one would pull the tenant id from a uri.
    – Brett
    Aug 5, 2015 at 14:19
  • Not obvious to me. I expected it to be shown in the UI somewhere. Having to hunt for it in the Uri or use powershell to get it after you authenticate is really weird. We want to limit certain tennants in our app so we need to ask for the ID from the tennant owner. This method is going to confuse a lot of them.
    – PilotBob
    Aug 13, 2015 at 20:35
  • 3
    Not only is it madness, it's official =/ "The tenant id for your Office 365 tenant is displayed as part of the URL" see: support.office.com/en-us/article/…
    – Bigginn
    Feb 29, 2016 at 3:44
36

Just to add a new method to an old (but still relevant question). In the new portal, clicking the help icon from any screen and selecting 'Show Diagnostics' will show you a JSON document containing all your tenant information including TenantId, Tenant Name, and much, much more useful information

enter image description here

0
22
Answer recommended by Microsoft Azure Collective

This answer was provided on Microsoft's website, last updated on 3/21/2018:

https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/azure-resource-manager/resource-group-create-service-principal-portal

In short, here are the screenshots from the walkthrough:

  1. Select Azure Active Directory.

Azure Active Directory

  1. To get the tenant ID, select Properties for your Azure AD tenant.

Select Properties

  1. Copy the Directory ID. This value is your tenant ID.

Copy the Directory ID, this is the tenant ID.

Hope this helps.

17

Via PowerShell anonymously:

(Invoke-WebRequest https://login.windows.net/YOURDIRECTORYNAME.onmicrosoft.com/.well-known/openid-configuration|ConvertFrom-Json).token_endpoint.Split('/')[3]
1
  • 1
    He was looking for a way to do it without using the built-in commands -- fortunately, this demonstrates how to do it in any language... nifty. Apr 16, 2018 at 20:39
12

Another way to get it from App registrations

Azure Active Directory -> App registrations -> click the app and it will show the tenant ID like this

enter image description here

1
  • 1
    I see no tenant ID under most items in azure.
    – rollsch
    Jan 13, 2020 at 4:29
9

You can run a simple curl call to get the tenant id of an azure subscription without any authentication.

make a curl call to :

https://management.azure.com/subscriptions/{subscription-id}?api-version=2015-01-01

The request fails but you will be able to get the tenant id from the response header. The tenant id is present in line followed by "WWW-Authenticate: Bearer authorization_uri="https://login.windows.net/"

you can use curl -v to show the response header.

0
6

As of now (06/07/2018), an easy approach would be running az account show in the Azure Cloud Shell (requires a Storage Account) in the Azure Portal.

--- Command ---

az account show

--- Command Output ---

{
  "environmentName": "AzureCloud",
  "id": "{Subscription Id (GUID)}",
  "isDefault": true,
  "name": "{Subscription Name}",
  "state": "Enabled",
  "tenantId": "{Tenant Id (GUID)}",
  "user": {
    "cloudShellID": true,
    "name": "{User email}",
    "type": "user"
  }
}

Find more details on Azure Cloud Shell at Overview of Azure Cloud Shell | Microsoft Docs.

1
  • 1
    You can add the --query tenantId parameter to get the tenant Id exactly: az account show --query tenantId Oct 19, 2020 at 14:15
6

If you have installed Azure CLI 2.0 in your machine, you should be able to get the list of subscription that you belong to with the following command,

az login

if you want to see as a table output you could just use

az account get-access-token --query tenant --output tsv

or you could use the Rest API

Tenants - List | Microsoft Docs

4

Use the Azure CLI

az account get-access-token --query tenant --output tsv
3
  • 2
    This is exactly what the questioneer is not asking for
    – Jim Aho
    May 30, 2019 at 16:27
  • 1
    This isn't a Powershell command - it's an Azure CLI command. Jan 10, 2021 at 17:04
  • azure cli is far better and cloud native Mar 12, 2021 at 15:13
4

One click answer:

open this URL:

https://portal.azure.com/#blade/Microsoft_AAD_IAM/ActiveDirectoryMenuBlade/Properties

enter image description here

3

In PowerShell:

Add-AzureRmAccount #if not already logged in 
Get-AzureRmSubscription -SubscriptionName <SubscriptionName> | Select-Object -Property TenantId
0
3

Step 1: Login to Microsoft Azure portal

Step 2: Search Azure Active directory

Step 3: Click on overview and find the tenant id from tenant information section

enter image description here

enter image description here

2

If you have Azure CLI setup, you can run the command below,

az account list

or find it at ~/.azure/credentials

1

From Java:

public static String GetSubscriptionTenantId (String subscriptionId) throws ClientProtocolException, IOException
{
    String tenantId = null;
    String url = "https://management.azure.com/subscriptions/" + subscriptionId + "?api-version=2016-01-01";

    HttpClient client = HttpClientBuilder.create().build();
    HttpGet request = new HttpGet(url);
    HttpResponse response = client.execute(request);

    Header[] headers = response.getAllHeaders();
    for (Header header : headers)
    {
        if (header.getName().equals("WWW-Authenticate"))
        {
            // split by '"' to get the URL, split the URL by '/' to get the ID
            tenantId = header.getValue().split("\"")[1].split("/")[3];
        }
    }

    return tenantId;
}
1

According to Microsoft:

Find your tenantID: Your tenantId can be discovered by opening the following metadata.xml document: https://login.microsoft.com/GraphDir1.onmicrosoft.com/FederationMetadata/2007-06/FederationMetadata.xml - replace "graphDir1.onMicrosoft.com", with your tenant's domain value (any domain that is owned by the tenant will work). The tenantId is a guid, that is part of the sts URL, returned in the first xml node's sts url ("EntityDescriptor"): e.g. "https://sts.windows.net/".

Reference:

https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/resources/samples/active-directory-dotnet-graphapi-web/

1
  • Two of the three are bad links. Mar 16, 2021 at 1:43
1

A simple way to get the tenantID is:

Connect-MsolService -cred $LiveCred  #sign in to tenant

(Get-MSOLCompanyInformation).objectid.guid  #get tenantID
1

Using Azure Portal:

  • Step1: Login to azure portal and search for Azure Active Directory and select it .
  • Step2: In the overview page of Azure Active Directory,find the tenant ID.

enter image description here

Using Azure CLI:

Use one of the commands az login, az account list, or az account tenant list. Find the TenantId property for each of subscriptions in the output from each command.

Using Powershell

Use the below command in powershell cmdlet.

Connect-AzAccount
Get-AzTenant

Reference:

Azure CLI

Get-Aztenant

1

I use following to get tenant id

az account show --query homeTenantId --output tsv
1

A number of contributors already mentioned going to Azure Portal, opening the Active Directory page, and finding it there. However, some folks work for organizations that don't allow them to view the Active Directory page.

Another way to quickly find the Tenant Id in Azure Portal is to click on your account icon in the upper right corner of the Azure Portal

Azure Portal account icon

Select "Switch Directories" from the Account drop-down

Switch Directories page

You'll see a table with one or more Directories listed and showing their "Directory Id". Directory Id is the same thing as Tenant Id.

0

You can also get the tenant id, in fact all subscription details by logging into the url resources.azure.com

0

For AAD-B2C it is fairly simple. From Azure Portal with a B2C directory associated, go to your B2C directory (I added the "Azure AD B2C" to my portal's left menu). In the B2C directory click on "User flows (policies) directory menu item. In the policies pane click on one of your policies you previously added to select it. It should open a pane for the policy. Click "Properties". In the next pane is a section, "Token compatibility settings" which has a property "Issuer". Your AAD-B2C tenant GUID is contained in the URL.

0

The one working for me is this (after az login):

 az account show |grep tenantId | awk {'print $2'} |tr -d '[:punct:]'
0

Go to the Azure portal > Azure Active Direcrory. On the main screen, you should see your tenant ID.

1
  • 1
    Your answer could be improved with additional supporting information. Please edit to add further details, such as citations or documentation, so that others can confirm that your answer is correct. You can find more information on how to write good answers in the help center.
    – Community Bot
    Jun 17, 2022 at 7:59
-2
xxx@Azure:~$ az ad sp create-for-rbac
Retrying role assignment creation: 1/36
{
  "appId": "401143c2-95ef-4792-9900-23e07f7801e7",
  "displayName": "azure-cli-2018-07-10-20-31-57",
  "name": "http://azure-cli-2018-07-10-20-31-57",
  "password": "a0471d14-9300-4177-ab08-5c45adb3476b",
  "tenant": "e569f29e-b008-4cea-b6f0-48fa8532d64a"
}
1
  • It'll create a new sp.
    – Robinho
    Jul 23, 2018 at 20:46

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