They can serve two terms.
Franklin D. Roosevelt was our only four-term president.
The president is elected for a four-year term. They can only be elected twice.
No, US Presidents can only serve 2 terms, even if unconsecutively.
Unlimited terms. The only elected federal office to have term limits is the president.
You are probably asking about "two terms in office." In America, a president is only allowed to be elected twice. Each presidential term is 4 years. So, a president, if he is elected two times, is said to be a two-term president, or it is said he served "two terms in office." (The word "office" refers to the Office of the Presidency.)
A US President is restricted to only two elected terms and up to two years of a President that person succeeded in office - for a total of 10 years maximum as President.
Technically speaking, they've all been elected in to *office*. However, Ford is the only one who was never elected to the Executive Office (as either President or Vice-President).
2 times. (4 year terms; only 8 years all together.) A president may only be elected twice to the office of president, although a former president may have other positions in government after he is out of office.
Grove Cleveland has that distinction. He was elected in 1884, defeated in 1888 and elected again in1892.
Franklin Roosevelt was the only one to serve for four terms as president.
Washington was the only president never elected to his office - he was acclaimed to it. He served two terms, and could have served to his death, but thought no one person should serve more than two terms.
A president can only be elected to at most two four-years terms. Further some of them die in office or resign and do not complete their terms,