Amy Klobuchar was just reelected in 2024 to a six‑year U.S. Senate term, so her current term is scheduled to run until January 3, 2031, with the next regular Senate election for her seat in November 2030.

Why that’s the date

  • U.S. senators serve six‑year terms, with elections in even‑numbered years and terms ending the following January.
  • Klobuchar won a fourth Senate term in the 2024 election, defeating Republican Royce White.
  • That 2024 victory extends her Senate service through early 2031, which means the next regularly scheduled election for her seat falls in November 2030.

One wrinkle: her governor run

  • In January 2026, Klobuchar announced a campaign for governor of Minnesota after Gov. Tim Walz dropped his reelection bid.
  • If she wins the 2026 governor’s race and leaves the Senate early, Minnesota law allows the governor to appoint a temporary replacement until a special election is held for the remainder of her term, which still officially ends in 2030.
  • So: on paper she is up for regular Senate reelection in 2030, but an earlier special election could happen if she vacates the seat to become governor.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.