Lock Away Your AWS Account Root User Access Keys

You use an access key (an access key ID and secret access key) to make programmatic requests to AWS. However, do not use your AWS account root user access key. The access key for your AWS account root user gives full access to all your resources for all AWS services, including your billing information. You cannot reduce the permissions associated with your AWS account root user access key.

Therefore, protect your root user access key like you would your credit card numbers or any other sensitive secret. Here are some ways to do that:

  • If you don’t already have an access key for your AWS account root user, don’t create one unless you absolutely need to. Instead, use your account email address and password to sign in to the AWS Management Console and create an IAM user for yourself that has administrative permissions.
  • If you do have an access key for your AWS account root user, delete it. If you must keep it, rotate (change) the access key regularly. To delete or rotate your root user access keys, go to the My Security Credentials page in the AWS Management Console and sign in with your account’s email address and password. You can manage your access keys in the Access keys section. For more information about rotating access keys, see Rotating Access Keys.
  • Never share your AWS account root user password or access keys with anyone. The remaining sections of this document discuss various ways to avoid having to share your AWS account root user credentials with other users and to avoid having to embed them in an application.
  • Use a strong password to help protect account-level access to the AWS Management Console. For information about managing your AWS account root user password, see Changing the AWS Account Root User Password.
  • Enable AWS multi-factor authentication (MFA) on your AWS account root user account. For more information, see Using Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA) in AWS.

Create Individual IAM Users

Don’t use your AWS account root user credentials to access AWS, and don’t give your credentials to anyone else. Instead, create individual users for anyone who needs access to your AWS account. Create an IAM user for yourself as well, give that user administrative permissions, and use that IAM user for all your work. For information about how to do this, see Creating Your First IAM Admin User and Group.

By creating individual IAM users for people accessing your account, you can give each IAM user a unique set of security credentials. You can also grant different permissions to each IAM user. If necessary, you can change or revoke an IAM user’s permissions anytime. (If you give out your root user credentials, it can be difficult to revoke them, and it is impossible to restrict their permissions.)

Note: Before you set permissions for individual IAM users, though, see the next point about groups.

Use Groups to Assign Permissions to IAM Users

Instead of defining permissions for individual IAM users, it’s usually more convenient to create groups that relate to job functions (administrators, developers, accounting, etc.). Next, define the relevant permissions for each group. Finally, assign IAM users to those groups. All the users in an IAM group inherit the permissions assigned to the group. That way, you can make changes for everyone in a group in just one place. As people move around in your company, you can simply change what IAM group their IAM user belongs to.

For more information, see the following:

Grant Least Privilege

When you create IAM policies, follow the standard security advice of granting least privilege, or granting only the permissions required to perform a task. Determine what users (and roles) need to do and then craft policies that allow them to perform only those tasks.

Start with a minimum set of permissions and grant additional permissions as necessary. Doing so is more secure than starting with permissions that are too lenient and then trying to tighten them later.

You can use access level groupings to understand the level of access that a policy grants. Policy actions are classified as List, Read, Write, Permissions management, or Tagging. For example, you can choose actions from the List and Read access levels to grant read-only access to your users. To learn how to use policy summaries to understand access level permissions, see Use Access Levels to Review IAM Permissions.

One feature that can help with this is service last accessed data. View this data on the Access Advisor tab on the IAM console details page for an IAM user, group, role, or policy. If you sign in using AWS Organizations master account credentials, you can view this data in the AWS Organizations section of the IAM console. You can also use the AWS CLI or AWS API to retrieve a report for service last accessed data for entities or policies in IAM or Organizations. You can use this information to identify unnecessary permissions so that you can refine your IAM or Organizations policies to better adhere to the principle of least privilege. For more information, see Refining Permissions Using Service Last Accessed Data.

To further reduce permissions, you can view your account’s events in AWS CloudTrail Event history. CloudTrail event logs include detailed event information that you can use to reduce the policy’s permissions. The logs include only the actions and resources that your IAM entities need. For more information, see Viewing CloudTrail Events in the CloudTrail Console in the AWS CloudTrail User Guide.

For more information, see the following:

Get Started Using Permissions with AWS Managed Policies

Providing your employees with only the permissions they need requires time and detailed knowledge of IAM policies. Employees need time to learn which AWS services they want or need to use. Administrators need time to learn about and test IAM.

To get started quickly, you can use AWS managed policies to give your employees the permissions they need to get started. These policies are already available in your account and are maintained and updated by AWS. For more information about AWS managed policies, see AWS Managed Policies.

AWS managed policies are designed to provide permissions for many common use cases. Full access AWS managed policies such as AmazonDynamoDBFullAccess and IAMFullAccess define permissions for service administrators by granting full access to a service. Power-user AWS managed policies such as AWSCodeCommitPowerUser and AWSKeyManagementServicePowerUser provide multiple levels of access to AWS services without allowing permissions management permissions. Partial-access AWS managed policies such as AmazonMobileAnalyticsWriteOnlyAccess and AmazonEC2ReadOnlyAccess provide specific levels of access to AWS services. AWS managed policies make it easier for you to assign appropriate permissions to users, groups, and roles than if you had to write the policies yourself.

AWS managed policies for job functions can span multiple services and align with common job functions in the IT industry. For a list and descriptions of job function policies, see AWS Managed Policies for Job Functions.

Use Customer Managed Policies Instead of Inline Policies

For custom policies, we recommend that you use managed policies instead of inline policies. A key advantage of using these policies is that you can view all of your managed policies in one place in the console. You can also view this information with a single AWS CLI or AWS API operation. Inline policies are policies that exist only on an IAM identity (user, group, or role). Managed policies are separate IAM resources that you can attach to multiple identities. For more information, see Managed Policies and Inline Policies.

If you have inline policies in your account, you can convert them to managed policies. To do this, copy the policy to a new managed policy, attach the new policy to the identity that has the inline policy. Then delete the inline policy. You can do this using the instructions below.

To convert an inline policy to a managed policy

  1. Sign in to the AWS Management Console and open the IAM console at https://console.aws.amazon.com/iam/.
  2. In the navigation pane, choose GroupsUsers, or Roles.
  3. In the list, choose the name of the group, user, or role that has the policy you want to remove.
  4. Choose the Permissions tab. If you chose Groups, expand the Inline Policies section if necessary.
  5. For groups, choose Show Policy next to the inline policy that you want to remove. For users and roles, choose Show n more, if necessary, and then choose the arrow next to the inline policy that you want to remove.
  6. Copy the JSON policy document for the policy.
  7. In the navigation pane, choose Policies.
  8. Choose Create policy and then choose the JSON tab.
  9. Replace the existing text with your JSON policy text, and then choose Review policy.
  10. Enter a name for your policy and choose Create policy.
  11. In the navigation pane, choose GroupsUsers, or Roles, and again choose the name of the group, user, or role that has the policy you want to remove.
  12. For groups, choose Attach Policy. For users and roles, choose Add permissions.
  13. For groups, select the check box next to the name of your new policy, and then choose Attach Policy. For users or roles, choose Add permissions. On the next page, choose Attach existing policies directly, select the check box next to the name of your new policy, choose Next: Review, and then choose Add permissions.You are returned to the Summary page for your group, user, or role.
  14. For groups, choose Remove Policy next to the inline policy that you want to remove. For users or roles, choose X next to the inline policy that you want to remove.

In some circumstances, we do recommend choosing inline policies over managed policies. For details, see Choosing Between Managed Policies and Inline Policies.

Use Access Levels to Review IAM Permissions

To improve the security of your AWS account, you should regularly review and monitor each of your IAM policies. Make sure that your policies grant the least privilege that is needed to perform only the necessary actions.

When you review a policy, you can view the policy summary that includes a summary of the access level for each service within that policy. AWS categorizes each service action into one of five access levels based on what each action does: List, Read, Write, Permissions management, or Tagging. You can use these access levels to determine which actions to include in your policies.

For example, in the Amazon S3 service, you might want to allow a large group of users to access List and Read actions. Such actions permit those users to list the buckets and get objects in Amazon S3. However, you should allow only a small group of users to access the Amazon S3 Write actions to delete buckets or put objects into an S3 bucket. Additionally, you should reduce permissions to allow only administrators to access the Amazon S3 Permissions management actions. This ensures that only a limited number of people can manage bucket policies in Amazon S3. This is especially important for Permissions management actions in IAM and AWS Organizations services. Allowing Tagging actions grants a user permission to perform actions that only modify tags for a resource. However, some Write actions, such as CreateRole, allow tagging a resource when you create the resource or modify other attributes for that resource. Therefore, denying access to Tagging actions does not prevent a user from tagging resources. For details and examples of the access level classification, see Understanding Access Level Summaries Within Policy Summaries.

To view the access level classification that is assigned to each action in a service, see Actions, Resources, and Condition Keys for AWS Services.

To see the access levels for a policy, you must first locate the policy’s summary. The policy summary is included on the Policies page for managed policies, and on the Users page for policies that are attached to a user. For more information, see Policy Summary (List of Services).

Within a policy summary, the Access level column shows that the policy provides Full or Limited access to one or more of the four AWS access levels for the service. Alternately, it might show that the policy provides Full access to all the actions within the service. You can use the information within this Access level column to understand the level of access that the policy provides. You can then take action to make your AWS account more secure. For details and examples of the access level classification, see Understanding Access Level Summaries Within Policy Summaries.

Configure a Strong Password Policy for Your Users

If you allow users to change their own passwords, require that they create strong passwords and that they rotate their passwords periodically. On the Account Settings page of the IAM console, you can create a password policy for your account. You can use the password policy to define password requirements, such as minimum length, whether it requires non-alphabetic characters, how frequently it must be rotated, and so on.

For more information, see Setting an Account Password Policy for IAM Users.

Enable MFA

For extra security, we recommend that you require multi-factor authentication (MFA) for all users in your account. With MFA, users have a device that generates a response to an authentication challenge. Both the user’s credentials and the device-generated response are required to complete the sign-in process. If a user’s password or access keys are compromised, your account resources are still secure because of the additional authentication requirement.

The response is generated in one of the following ways:

  • Virtual and hardware MFA devices generate a code that you view on the app or device and then enter on the sign-in screen.
  • U2F security keys generate a response when you tap the device. The user does not manually enter a code on the sign-in screen.

For privileged IAM users who are allowed to access sensitive resources or API operations, we recommend using U2F or hardware MFA devices.

For more information about MFA, see Using Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA) in AWS.

To learn how to configure MFA-protected API access for access keys, see Configuring MFA-Protected API Access.

Use Roles for Applications That Run on Amazon EC2 Instances

Applications that run on an Amazon EC2 instance need credentials in order to access other AWS services. To provide credentials to the application in a secure way, use IAM roles. A role is an entity that has its own set of permissions, but that isn’t a user or group. Roles also don’t have their own permanent set of credentials the way IAM users do. In the case of Amazon EC2, IAM dynamically provides temporary credentials to the EC2 instance, and these credentials are automatically rotated for you.

When you launch an EC2 instance, you can specify a role for the instance as a launch parameter. Applications that run on the EC2 instance can use the role’s credentials when they access AWS resources. The role’s permissions determine what the application is allowed to do.

For more information, see Using an IAM Role to Grant Permissions to Applications Running on Amazon EC2 Instances.

Use Roles to Delegate Permissions

Don’t share security credentials between accounts to allow users from another AWS account to access resources in your AWS account. Instead, use IAM roles. You can define a role that specifies what permissions the IAM users in the other account are allowed. You can also designate which AWS accounts have the IAM users that are allowed to assume the role.

For more information, see Roles Terms and Concepts.

Do Not Share Access Keys

Access keys provide programmatic access to AWS. Do not embed access keys within unencrypted code or share these security credentials between users in your AWS account. For applications that need access to AWS, configure the program to retrieve temporary security credentials using an IAM role. To allow your users individual programmatic access, create an IAM user with personal access keys.

For more information, see Switching to an IAM Role (AWS API) and Managing Access Keys for IAM Users.

Rotate Credentials Regularly

Change your own passwords and access keys regularly, and make sure that all IAM users in your account do as well. That way, if a password or access key is compromised without your knowledge, you limit how long the credentials can be used to access your resources. You can apply a password policy to your account to require all your IAM users to rotate their passwords. You can also choose how often they must do so.

For more information about setting a password policy in your account, see Setting an Account Password Policy for IAM Users.

For more information about rotating access keys for IAM users, see Rotating Access Keys.

Remove Unnecessary Credentials

Remove IAM user credentials (passwords and access keys) that are not needed. For example, if you created an IAM user for an application that does not use the console, then the IAM user does not need a password. Similarly, if a user only uses the console, remove their access keys. Passwords and access keys that have not been used recently might be good candidates for removal. You can find unused passwords or access keys using the console, using the CLI or API, or by downloading the credentials report.

For more information about finding IAM user credentials that have not been used recently, see Finding Unused Credentials.

For more information about deleting passwords for an IAM user, see Managing Passwords for IAM Users.

For more information about deactivating or deleting access keys for an IAM user, see Managing Access Keys for IAM Users.

For more information about IAM credential reports, see Getting Credential Reports for Your AWS Account.

Use Policy Conditions for Extra Security

To the extent that it’s practical, define the conditions under which your IAM policies allow access to a resource. For example, you can write conditions to specify a range of allowable IP addresses that a request must come from. You can also specify that a request is allowed only within a specified date range or time range. You can also set conditions that require the use of SSL or MFA (multi-factor authentication). For example, you can require that a user has authenticated with an MFA device in order to be allowed to terminate an Amazon EC2 instance.

For more information, see IAM JSON Policy Elements: Condition in the IAM Policy Elements Reference.

Monitor Activity in Your AWS Account

You can use logging features in AWS to determine the actions users have taken in your account and the resources that were used. The log files show the time and date of actions, the source IP for an action, which actions failed due to inadequate permissions, and more.

Logging features are available in the following AWS services:

  • Amazon CloudFront – Logs user requests that CloudFront receives. For more information, see Access Logs in the Amazon CloudFront Developer Guide.
  • AWS CloudTrail – Logs AWS API calls and related events made by or on behalf of an AWS account. For more information, see the AWS CloudTrail User Guide.
  • Amazon CloudWatch – Monitors your AWS Cloud resources and the applications you run on AWS. You can set alarms in CloudWatch based on metrics that you define. For more information, see the Amazon CloudWatch User Guide.
  • AWS Config – Provides detailed historical information about the configuration of your AWS resources, including your IAM users, groups, roles, and policies. For example, you can use AWS Config to determine the permissions that belonged to a user or group at a specific time. For more information, see the AWS Config Developer Guide.
  • Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3) – Logs access requests to your Amazon S3 buckets. For more information, see Server Access Logging in the Amazon Simple Storage Service Developer Guide.