Eight, in two four year terms of office.
The president can be elected twice in terms of four years. A maximum of eight years- two terms
A president election is held every four years. A president can be elected twice and serve an absolute maximum of 11 years.
No, four years, twice is the maximum.
The US president can be elected for two terms which would be 8 years total.
In 1951, the Twenty-second Amendment was ratified which limited presidents to two terms. Since each term is four years, no president may be elected to serve more than 8 years.
The president of the US is elected for a 4-year term. Thereafter, the president may be re-elected for one additional term, for a maximum total of eight years.
A U.S. president can be elected to a maximum of two terms, totaling four years per term, as established by the 22nd Amendment to the Constitution. This means the most a president can serve is eight years in office. However, if a president assumes office through succession and serves less than two years of a term, they can run for two additional full terms, potentially allowing for a maximum of ten years in total.
Two terms max each of four years
Two terms for a total of 8 years. This was set by the 22 amendment.
That is what the 22nd amendment to US Constitution implies. A president can only be elected for two terms which means eight years, but a person who serves out the term of another president can still be elected for two more terms provided he served no more than two years of another's term.
5 years and the president can't be re-elected.
It depends upon the length of the unexpired term that he succeeds to. If a succeeding President serves more than 2 years of another President's term, he can have only one elected term. So his maximum would be between 6 and 8 years. If he serves less than 2 years after succession, he is still eligible for 2 elected terms and may serve between 8 and 10 years. No US President has ever served more than one elected term after succeeding to the position.