Donald Trump faced impeachment twice during his first presidency (2017-2021), making him the only U.S. president impeached that many times.

Each time, the House of Representatives approved articles of impeachment, but the Senate acquitted him, so he remained in office.

First Impeachment (2019)

This stemmed from a July 2019 phone call with Ukraine's President Volodymyr Zelensky. Trump was accused of abuse of power by pressuring Ukraine to investigate Joe Biden while withholding military aid, and obstruction of Congress for blocking the probe.

The Democratic-led House impeached him on December 18, 2019; the Senate acquitted in February 2020.

Second Impeachment (2021)

After the January 6 Capitol riot, Trump was charged with incitement of insurrection for repeated false election fraud claims, his rally speech urging supporters to "fight like hell," and prior election challenges.

The House impeached him on January 13, 2021—just days before he left office; the Senate acquitted him in February 2021.

Recent Context (2025)

A House resolution (H.Res.353) in May 2025 proposed impeaching him again as current president, citing issues like the "Department of Government Efficiency" under Elon Musk, court contempt, and due process violations. No updates confirm passage or trial as of early 2026.

TL;DR: Impeached twice before—Ukraine scandal and Capitol riot—both ended in acquittals; a new effort emerged in 2025 over executive overreach.

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