Forum Discussion

Blakemar's avatar
Blakemar
Copper Contributor
Aug 22, 2020

Relationship between Azure Active Directory and Directory (Tenant?)

So I've read through this post but still slightly uncertain of the relationship (https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/t5/azure/understanding-azure-account-subscription-and-directory/m-p/34800#M35)   ...
  • pazdedav's avatar
    Aug 24, 2020

    Hi Blakemar ,

     

    I understand your confusion. I agree there are several "terms" in Azure that seem to overlap or could be synonyms. In addition, you might see these terms used inconsistently in the Portal UI or documentation.

     

    I always try to approach it from the practical point of view, for example:

    • Can I create a new Azure AD tenant and if yes, how is it related to my existing environment?
    • Can I create several directories under that tenant?
    • Can I have several domains under my tenant?

    I like to use this article written for AAD developers as a reference: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/active-directory/develop/quickstart-create-new-tenant#use-an-existing-tenant

     

    I saw some confusing or even wrong replies in the "linked" topic like someone claiming you can have several directories under one AAD tenant.

     

    I see it this way: Azure AD tenant = directory, and there is a strict 1:1 relationship between them (you cannot create several directories under a tenant). Each tenant has it's globally unique 'tenant ID' (in some places in the Portal referred as 'directory ID', but the ID is the same.

     

    When you use 'Switch directories' option in the Portal, you are authenticating to a different AAD tenant (your account was invited as a guest there via Azure AD B2B Collaboration), so you will see different subscriptions and resources, and have different permissions, when you do so. Since most organizations have one production tenant (but some like ISVs can have more), you are switching to a different "company". That's how I see it.

     

    You can, however, have several domains under one tenant / directory. You always get a default one {something}.onmicrosoft.com, but you can onboard custom domains (like contoso.com) upon proving you own that domain.

Resources