

# Viewing an aggregated list of Amazon Q Developer subscriptions
<a name="subscribe-visibility"></a>

**Note**  
This section does not apply to personal accounts (Builder IDs).

If you are a management account administrator within an organization managed by [AWS Organizations](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/organizations/latest/userguide/orgs_introduction.html), you can configure Amazon Q to display Amazon Q Developer Pro subscriptions from both *management* and *member* accounts in a single, unified list on the **Subscriptions** page of the Amazon Q console (*not* the Amazon Q Developer console) while signed in to your management account. This organization-wide visibility eliminates the need to sign in to multiple accounts to track your subscriptions.

**Note**  
Unified subscription information also appears on the **Dashboard** page of the Amazon Q Developer console when you enable organization-wide visibility.

If you are a member account administrator, you will only ever be able to view the subscriptions within the member accounts that you administer. This is true regardless of whether organization-wide visibility was enabled in the management account.

To enable organization-wide visibility of Amazon Q Developer subscriptions, you must enable trusted access to Amazon Q in your organization. *Trusted access* is an AWS Organizations feature that lets you designate Amazon Q as a *trusted service* that is allowed to query your organization's structure. This querying is required in order to show the status of subscriptions.

To learn more about trusted access, see [Enabling trusted access for AWS Account Management](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/accounts/latest/reference/using-orgs-trusted-access.html) in the *AWS Organizations User Guide*. 

To learn more about member and management accounts, see [Terminology and concepts for AWS Organizations](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/organizations/latest/userguide/orgs_getting-started_concepts.html) in the *AWS Organizations User Guide* for explanations.

Use the following instructions to enable trusted access to Amazon Q in your organization.

 **Prerequisites** 

Before you begin, make sure that:
+ You are an administrator of an AWS *management* account.
+ You have an *organization instance* of IAM Identity Center set up in your management account and connected to Amazon Q Developer.
+ Your organization instance of IAM Identity Center contains users who are subscribed to Amazon Q Developer Pro in member accounts.
+ You have the minimum permissions required to perform actions in the Amazon Q or Amazon Q Developer console (you can use either console to enable trusted access). For more information, see [Allow administrators to use the Amazon Q console](id-based-policy-examples-admins.md#q-admin-setup-admin-users-sub) and [Allow administrators to use the Amazon Q Developer console](id-based-policy-examples-admins.md#q-admin-setup-admin-users).

**To enable trusted access (enable organization-wide visibility of subscriptions)**

1. Sign in to the AWS Management Console using your AWS management account.

1. Do one of the following depending on the console you want to use:
   + Switch to the Amazon Q console. 

     Choose **Subscriptions**. 

     At the bottom of the page, in the **Subscription view settings** section, choose **Edit**.

     Choose **On**.
   + Switch to the Amazon Q Developer console.

     Choose **Settings**.

     In the **Subscription view settings** section, choose **Edit**. 

     Enable the toggle.

1. Choose **Save**. 

   Trusted access to Amazon Q is now enabled. Users and groups who are subscribed in member accounts now appear in the Amazon Q console (not the Amazon Q Developer console) when you're signed in as a management account administrator.