DEBIAN 10 - HOW TO ADD USER TO SUDO-GROUP USING USERMOD Grant Sudo Privileges Users with root privileges can grant sudo privileges to any account. There are two ways to do this: via the usermod command or by editing the sudoers file. The following text elaborates on both options. Add Debian User to Sudo Group Using usermod All sudo group users have sudo privileges. To add a user to the sudo group via the usermod command, use the following: usermod -aG sudo username The command consists of the following parts: usermod. Modifies a user account. -aG tells the command to add the user to a specific group. The -a option adds a user to the group without removing it from current groups. The -G option states the group in which to add the user. In this case, these two options always go together. sudo. The group we append to the above options. In this case, it is sudo, but it can be any other group. -username. The name of the user account you want to add to the sudo group. For example, add user1 to the sudo group with: usermod -aG sudo user1 The command has no output. However, to verify the new Debian sudo user was added to the group, run the command: getent group sudo The output lists all users in the group.