How to Write an Effective Security Policy for GitHub Repositories
A repository security policy is one of those documents that people often add because GitHub expects it, not because they have thought through what it needs to do. That is how you end up with policies that say little more than "email us if you find a problem" or, worse, tell researchers to open a public issue for a vulnerability report. An effective security policy is not a box-checking exercise. It is an operational document: it tells security researchers how to contact you safely, tells users which versions you still support, and tells everyone what kind of response process they can reasonably expect.
This post walks through how to write a security policy that is actually useful on GitHub: what sections it needs, how specific to be, which mistakes to avoid, and a practical SECURITY.md template you can adapt for your own repositories. The goal is not just to help you publish the file, but to help you publish one that will still read as clear, credible, and operational when someone actually needs it.
Useful beyond GitHub, too!
Although this post focuses on GitHub, most of the guidance applies equally well to GitLab and other source hosting platforms. The platform-specific details, such as where the policy is surfaced and how private vulnerability reporting works, may differ, but the core job of a security policy stays the same: define a private reporting path, set expectations, and make support boundaries clear.
