Linked epics
- Tier: Ultimate
- Offering: GitLab.com, GitLab Self-Managed, GitLab Dedicated
Linked epics are a bi-directional relationship between any two epics and appear in a block below the epic description. You can link epics in different groups.
The relationship only shows up in the UI if the user can see both epics. When you try to close an epic that has open blockers, a warning is displayed.
To manage linked epics through our API, see Linked epics API.
Ways to use linked epics
You can use linked epics to solve several planning and coordination challenges. The following examples show how linked epics help teams work together more effectively.
Cross-functional initiatives
Use linked epics to coordinate work between multiple teams and track interdependent deliverables. When teams work together on a large initiative, each team can manage their own epic while maintaining visibility into related work.
For example, when launching a new feature, development and marketing teams often work in parallel. The development team tracks technical implementation in their epic, while the marketing team plans promotional activities in a separate epic.
By linking these epics:
- Teams can track dependencies between technical and promotional work.
- Each team maintains autonomy while staying aligned on the broader initiative.
- Stakeholders get visibility into the full scope of the launch.
- Teams can identify and resolve blockers across organizational boundaries.
This coordination helps break down silos and ensures all aspects of the initiative stay in sync.
When you link epics across groups:
- Each team keeps their work in their own group.
- Teams can see related work without switching between groups.
- Status updates automatically flow between linked epics.
Dependency management
Use linked epics to manage and track work dependencies. When development can't begin until infrastructure changes are complete, linked epics help teams manage these dependencies.
For example, when building a new feature, teams often need infrastructure updates before development can start. The infrastructure team tracks their database migration work in one epic, while the development team plans feature implementation in another epic.
By linking these epics:
- Teams can track when infrastructure work is ready for development.
- Development teams can better plan their sprint capacity.
- Product managers can identify potential workflow delays.
- Teams stay informed of progress without constant meetings.
This visibility helps teams complete work in the right sequence and avoid blocked tasks.
When you link epics to show dependencies:
- Infrastructure and development work stays connected.
- Teams know when they can start their work.
- Status updates flow automatically between epics.
Higher-level planning
Use linked epics to connect short-term execution with long-term planning. When managing a series of releases, you can organize high-level goals and track individual feature deliverables.
For example, when planning multiple releases over several quarters, you can create separate epics for each release. Then link these release epics to a central roadmap epic that tracks the overall project.
By linking these epics:
- Teams can understand how their work fits into the larger strategy.
- Product managers can track progress across multiple releases.
- Teams stay focused on current work while seeing future plans.
- Stakeholders can monitor both granular and high-level progress.
This structure helps teams progress on current work while maintaining broader goals.
When you link epics for planning:
- Each release's progress is visible in the roadmap.
- Teams can see upcoming work early.
- Status updates roll up to the higher-level view.
Add a linked item
Version history
- Ability to link issues, tasks, objectives, and key results introduced in GitLab 18.1.
Link an epic and another:
- Epic
- Issue
- Task
- Objective
- Key Result
Prerequisites:
- You must have at least the Guest role for both groups or group and project.
- For GitLab SaaS: the epic that you're editing must be in a group on GitLab Ultimate. The epics you're linking can be in a group on a lower tier.
To link one epic to another item:
-
In the Linked items section of an epic, select Add.
-
Select the relationship between the two items. Either:
- relates to
- blocks
- is blocked by
-
To enter the linked item, either:
- Enter
#
, followed by the item's number. For example,#123
. - Enter
#
, followed by a word from the item's title. For example,#Deliver
. - Paste in the item's full URL.
Items of the same group can be specified just by the reference number. Items from a different group require additional information like the group name. For example:
- The same group:
#44
- Different group:
group#44
Valid references are added to a temporary list that you can review.
- Enter
-
Select Add.
The linked items are then displayed on the epic grouped by relationship. The relationship only shows in the UI if the user can see both items.
Alternatively, you can add linked items using quick actions:
/relate
/blocks
/blocked_by
Remove a linked item
Prerequisites:
- You must have at least the Guest role for the epic's group.
To remove a linked item:
- At the bottom of the description, find the Linked items section of the work item.
- For each linked item, select Remove ({close}).
The relationship is removed from both epics.
Blocking epics
When you add a linked item, you can show that it blocks or is blocked by another epic.
If you try to close a blocked epic using the Close epic button, a confirmation message appears.