It ends upon assassination.
There is no specific term limit for a Supreme Court justice. They are appointed for life, unless they choose to retire or are impeached.
It is a life term, but a judge may retire.
in the US Supreme Court, life
A Supreme Court justice holds their position for life, unless they voluntarily retire or are impeached and removed from office. The Constitution does not specify a term limit for Supreme Court justices.
There is no fixed limit on the number of terms a justice can serve on the US Supreme Court. Justices are appointed for life, which means they serve until retirement, death, resignation, or impeachment.
The U.S. Supreme Court has defined the term "search" to occur when
US Supreme Court decisions are called "Opinions."
A justice on the supreme court serves a life term.
A supreme court judge serves a life term.
They do not serve terms. Once appointed, they are there until they retire, resign, die or (highly unlikely) are impeached and convicted. State supreme courts often impose term limits on their supreme court justices; however, the number and length of terms vary by state. For more information, see Related Questions, below.
in 1789
The US Supreme Court has nine justices, the Court's official term for its judges.