Georgia was admitted to the Union on January 2, 1788. The state has had senators since the 1st Congress. Its Senate seats were declared vacant in March 1861 owing to its secession from the Union. They were again filled from February 1871.
United States senators are popularly elected to six-year terms that begin on January 3 of the year after their election. Elections are held the first Tuesday after November 1. Before 1914, Georgia's senators were chosen by the Georgia General Assembly, and before 1935, their terms began March 4. Popular Senate elections remained despite the General Assembly not taking action to ratify the Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution that was passed in 1913.
Rebecca Latimer Felton was the first female U.S. senator, representing Georgia in the Senate for one day in 1922, having been appointed to the seat to replace Thomas E. Watson after his death in September 1922.
Richard Russell Jr. was the state's longest serving senator, served from 1933 to 1971.
Since January 20, 2021, Georgia has been represented in the Senate by Democrats Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock. Ossoff defeated Republican David Perdue in the regularly-scheduled 2020 election, while Warnock defeated appointed Republican incumbent Kelly Loeffler in the concurrent special election, both of which were decided in runoffs on January 5, 2021. Ossoff is the first Jewish senator from Georgia and Warnock the first black senator from Georgia. Although both Ossoff and Warnock were sworn into office on the same date, Ossoff is officially Georgia's senior senator because his last name comes first alphabetically and he was elected to a full six-year term first.
Georgia is one of fourteen states alongside California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada, Pennsylvania, South Dakota and Utah to have a younger senior senator and an older junior senator.
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=2 | 1 | rowspan=2 style="text-align:left" | <br/>William Few<br /> | rowspan=2 | Anti-<br/>Admin. | rowspan=2 nowrap | Mar 4, 1789 âÂÂ<br/>Mar 3, 1793 | rowspan=2 | Elected in 1789.Lost re-election. | rowspan=2 | 1 | | rowspan=3 | 1 | rowspan=3 | Elected in 1789. | rowspan=8 nowrap | Mar 4, 1789 âÂÂ<br/>Mar 3, 1801 | rowspan=3 | Anti-<br/>Admin. | rowspan=8 style="text-align:right" | James Gunn<br /> ! rowspan=8 | 1
|- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=2 | 2 | rowspan=2 style="text-align:left" | <br/>James Jackson<br /> | | Anti-<br/>Admin. | rowspan=2 nowrap | Mar 4, 1793 âÂÂ<br/>Nov 16, 1795 | rowspan=2 | Elected in 1793.Resigned to run for the Georgia legislature. | rowspan=5 | 2 |
|- style="height:2em" | | Democratic-<br/>Republican | rowspan=3 | rowspan=5 | 2 | rowspan=5 | Re-elected in 1794.Retired. | rowspan=5 | Federalist
|- style="height:2em" ! 3 | align=left | <br/>George Walton<br /> | | Federalist | nowrap | Nov 16, 1795 âÂÂ<br/>Feb 20, 1796 | Appointed to continue Jackson's term.Retired when successor elected.
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=2 | 4 | rowspan=2 style="text-align:left" | Josiah Tattnall<br /> | rowspan=2 | Democratic-<br/>Republican | rowspan=2 nowrap | Feb 20, 1796 âÂÂ<br/>Mar 3, 1799 | rowspan=2 | Elected to finish Jackson's term.
|- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=6 | 5 | rowspan=6 style="text-align:left" | <br/>Abraham Baldwin<br /> | rowspan=6 | Democratic-<br/>Republican | rowspan=6 nowrap | Mar 4, 1799 âÂÂ<br/>Mar 4, 1807 | rowspan=3 | Elected in 1799. | rowspan=3 | 3 |
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=5 | 3 | rowspan=3 | Elected in 1800.Died. | rowspan=3 nowrap | Mar 4, 1801 âÂÂ<br/>Mar 19, 1806 | rowspan=3 | Democratic-<br/>Republican | rowspan=3 style="text-align:right" | <br/>James Jackson<br /> ! rowspan=3 | 2
|- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3 | Re-elected in 1804.Died. | rowspan=9 | 4 | rowspan=3
|- style="height:2em" | | nowrap | Mar 19, 1806 âÂÂ<br/>Jun 19, 1806 | colspan=3 | Vacant
|- style="height:2em" | Elected to finish Jackson's term. | rowspan=5 nowrap | Jun 19, 1806 âÂÂ<br/>Nov 14, 1809 | rowspan=5 | Democratic-<br/>Republican | rowspan=5 style="text-align:right" | <br/>John Milledge<br /> ! rowspan=5 | 3
|- style="height:2em" | colspan=3 | Vacant | nowrap | Mar 4, 1807 âÂÂ<br/>Aug 27, 1807 | | rowspan=3 | rowspan=7 | 4 | rowspan=4 | Re-elected in 1806.Resigned.
|- style="height:2em" ! 6 | align=left | <br/>George Jones<br /> | | Democratic-<br/>Republican | nowrap | Aug 27, 1807 âÂÂ<br/>Nov 7, 1807 | Appointed to continue Baldwin's term.Lost special election.
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=6 | 7 | rowspan=6 style="text-align:left" | <br/>William H. Crawford<br /> | rowspan=6 | Democratic-<br/>Republican | rowspan=6 nowrap | Nov 7, 1807 âÂÂ<br/>Mar 23, 1813 | rowspan=4 | Elected to finish Baldwin's term.
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3
|- style="height:2em" | | nowrap | Nov 14, 1809 âÂÂ<br/>Nov 27, 1809 | colspan=3 | Vacant
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=2 | Elected to finish Milledge's term. | rowspan=13 nowrap | Nov 27, 1809 âÂÂ<br/>Mar 3, 1819 | rowspan=13 | Democratic-<br/>Republican | rowspan=13 style="text-align:right" | <br/>Charles Tait<br /> ! rowspan=13 | 4
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=2 | Re-elected in 1810 or 1811Resigned to become U.S. Minister to France. | rowspan=8 | 5 |
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=4 | rowspan=11 | 5 | rowspan=11 | Re-elected in 1813.
|- style="height:2em" | colspan=3 | Vacant | nowrap | Mar 23, 1813 âÂÂ<br/>Apr 8, 1813 |
|- style="height:2em" ! 8 | align=left | William Bellinger Bulloch<br /> | | Democratic-<br/>Republican | nowrap | Apr 8, 1813 âÂÂ<br/>Nov 6, 1813 | Appointed to continue Crawford's term.Retired when successor elected.
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=2 | 9 | rowspan=2 style="text-align:left" | <br/>William Wyatt Bibb<br /> | rowspan=2 | Democratic-<br/>Republican | rowspan=2 nowrap | Nov 6, 1813 âÂÂ<br/>Nov 9, 1816 | rowspan=2 | Elected to finish Crawford's term.<br/>Resigned.
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3
|- style="height:2em" | colspan=3 | Vacant | nowrap | Nov 9, 1816 âÂÂ<br/>Nov 13, 1816 |
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=2 | 10 | rowspan=2 style="text-align:left" | <br/>George Troup<br /> | rowspan=2 | Democratic-<br/>Republican | rowspan=2 nowrap | Nov 13, 1816 âÂÂ<br/>Sep 23, 1818 | Elected to finish Crawford's term.
|- style="height:2em" | Elected to full term in 1816.Resigned. | rowspan=9 | 6 | rowspan=4
|- style="height:2em" | colspan=3 | Vacant | nowrap | Sep 23, 1818 âÂÂ<br/>Nov 23, 1818 |
|- style="height:2em" ! 11 | align=left | <br/>John Forsyth<br /> | | Democratic-<br/>Republican | nowrap | Nov 23, 1818 âÂÂ<br/>Feb 17, 1819 | Elected to finish Troup's term.Resigned to become U.S. Minister to Spain.
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=2 colspan=3 | Vacant | rowspan=2 nowrap | Feb 17, 1819 âÂÂ<br/>Nov 6, 1819 | rowspan=2 |
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=2 | rowspan=8 | 6 | rowspan=8 | Elected in 1819. | rowspan=8 nowrap | Mar 4, 1819 âÂÂ<br/>Mar 3, 1825 | rowspan=8 | Democratic-<br/>Republican | rowspan=8 style="text-align:right" | <br/>John Elliott<br /> ! rowspan=8 | 5
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=2 | 12 | rowspan=2 style="text-align:left" | <br/>Freeman Walker<br /> | rowspan=2 | Democratic-<br/>Republican | rowspan=2 nowrap | Nov 6, 1819 âÂÂ<br/>Aug 6, 1821 | rowspan=2 | Elected to finish Troup's term.Resigned.
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3
|- style="height:2em" | colspan=3 | Vacant | nowrap | Aug 6, 1821 âÂÂ<br/>Nov 10, 1821 |
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=2 | 13 | rowspan=2 style="text-align:left" | <br/>Nicholas Ware<br /> | rowspan=2 | Democratic-<br/>Republican | rowspan=2 nowrap | Nov 10, 1821 âÂÂ<br/>Sep 7, 1824 | Elected to finish Troup's term.
|- style="height:2em" | Re-elected in 1823.Died. | rowspan=6 | 7 | rowspan=3
|- style="height:2em" | colspan=3 | Vacant | nowrap | Sep 7, 1824 âÂÂ<br/>Dec 6, 1824 |
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=3 | 14 | rowspan=3 style="text-align:left" | Thomas W. Cobb<br /> | | Democratic-<br/>Republican | rowspan=3 nowrap | Dec 6, 1824 âÂÂ<br/>Nov 7, 1828 | rowspan=3 | Elected to finish Ware's term.Resigned.
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=2 | Jacksonian | | rowspan=6 | 7 | rowspan=4 | Elected in 1825.Resigned to become U.S. Attorney General. | rowspan=4 nowrap | Mar 4, 1825 âÂÂ<br/>Mar 9, 1829 | rowspan=4 | Jacksonian | rowspan=4 style="text-align:right" | <br/>John M. Berrien<br /> ! rowspan=4 | 6
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=2
|- style="height:2em" ! 15 | align=left | <br/>Oliver H. Prince<br /> | | Jacksonian | nowrap | Nov 7, 1828 âÂÂ<br/>Mar 3, 1829 | Elected to finish Ware's term.
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=5 | 16 | rowspan=5 style="text-align:left" | <br/>George Troup<br /> | rowspan=5 | Jacksonian | rowspan=5 nowrap | Mar 4, 1829 âÂÂ<br/>Nov 8, 1833 | rowspan=5 | Elected in 1828.Resigned. | rowspan=9 | 8 | rowspan=3
|- style="height:2em" | | nowrap | Mar 9, 1829 âÂÂ<br/>Nov 9, 1829 | colspan=3 | Vacant
|- style="height:2em" | Elected to finish Berrien's term. | rowspan=5 nowrap | Nov 9, 1829 âÂÂ<br/>Jun 27, 1834 | rowspan=5 | Jacksonian | rowspan=5 style="text-align:right" | <br/>John Forsyth<br /> ! rowspan=5 | 7
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=7 | 8 | rowspan=4 | Re-elected in 1830 or 1831.Resigned to become U.S. Secretary of State.
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=5
|- style="height:2em" | colspan=3 | Vacant | nowrap | Nov 8, 1833 âÂÂ<br/>Nov 21, 1833 |
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=5 | 17 | rowspan=5 style="text-align:left" | <br/>John P. King<br /> | rowspan=4 | Jacksonian | rowspan=5 nowrap | Nov 21, 1833 âÂÂ<br/>Nov 1, 1837 | rowspan=3 | Elected to finish Troup's term.
|- style="height:2em" | | nowrap | Jun 27, 1834 âÂÂ<br/>Jan 12, 1835 | colspan=3 | Vacant
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=2 | Elected to finish Forsyth's term. | rowspan=7 nowrap | Jan 12, 1835 âÂÂ<br/>Mar 3, 1843 | rowspan=2 | Jacksonian | rowspan=7 style="text-align:right" | Alfred Cuthbert<br /> ! rowspan=7 | 8
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=2 | Re-elected in 1834.Resigned. | rowspan=5 | 9 |
|- style="height:2em" | | Democratic | rowspan=3 | rowspan=5 | 9 | rowspan=5 | Re-elected in 1837.Retired. | rowspan=5 | Democratic
|- style="height:2em" | colspan=3 | Vacant | nowrap | Nov 1, 1837 âÂÂ<br/>Nov 22, 1837 |
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=2 | 18 | rowspan=2 style="text-align:left" | <br/>Wilson Lumpkin<br /> | rowspan=2 | Democratic | rowspan=2 nowrap | Nov 22, 1837 âÂÂ<br/>Mar 3, 1841 | rowspan=2 | Elected to finish King's term.
|- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=9 | 19 | rowspan=3 style="text-align:left" | <br/>John M. Berrien<br /> | rowspan=3 | Whig | rowspan=3 nowrap | Mar 4, 1841 âÂÂ<br/>May 1845 | rowspan=3 | Elected in 1840.Resigned to become judge of the Supreme Court of Georgia. | rowspan=5 | 10 |
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=6 | 10 | rowspan=5 | Elected in 1843.Resigned. | rowspan=5 nowrap | Mar 4, 1843 âÂÂ<br/>Feb 4, 1848 | rowspan=5 | Democratic | rowspan=5 style="text-align:right" | <br/>Walter T. Colquitt<br /> ! rowspan=5 | 9
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3
|- style="height:2em" | colspan=2 | Vacant | nowrap | May 1845 âÂÂ<br/>Nov 13, 1845 |
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=5 style="text-align:left" | <br/>John M. Berrien<br /> | rowspan=5 | Whig | rowspan=5 nowrap | Nov 13, 1845 âÂÂ<br/>May 28, 1852 | Elected to finish his own term.
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=4 | Re-elected in 1846.Resigned. | rowspan=5 | 11 | rowspan=2
|- style="height:2em" | Appointed to finish Colquitt's term.Retired. | nowrap | Feb 4, 1848 âÂÂ<br/>Mar 3, 1849 | | Democratic | align=right | <br/>Herschel V. Johnson<br /> ! 10
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=5 | 11 | rowspan=5 | Elected in 1847 for the term beginning in 1849. | rowspan=5 nowrap | Mar 4, 1849 âÂÂ<br/>Mar 3, 1855 | rowspan=5 | Whig | rowspan=5 style="text-align:right" | <br/>William Crosby Dawson<br /> ! rowspan=5 | 11
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3
|- style="height:2em" | colspan=3 | Vacant | nowrap | May 28, 1852 âÂÂ<br/>May 31, 1852 |
|- style="height:2em" ! 20 | align=left | <br/>Robert M. Charlton<br /> | | Democratic | nowrap | May 31, 1852 âÂÂ<br/>Mar 3, 1853 | Appointed to finish Berrien's term. |
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=5 | 21 | rowspan=5 style="text-align:left" | <br/>Robert Toombs<br /> | rowspan=5 | Democratic | rowspan=5 nowrap | Mar 4, 1853 âÂÂ<br/>Feb 4, 1861 | rowspan=3 | Elected in 1852. | rowspan=3 | 12 |
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=5 | 12 | rowspan=3 | Elected in 1854 or 1855.Withdrew. | rowspan=3 nowrap | Mar 4, 1855 âÂÂ<br/>Jan 28, 1861 | rowspan=3 | Democratic | rowspan=3 style="text-align:right" | <br/>Alfred Iverson Sr.<br /> ! rowspan=3 | 12
|- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=2 | Re-elected in 1858.Withdrew. | rowspan=5 | 13 | rowspan=3
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=7 | Civil War and Reconstruction | rowspan=7 nowrap | Jan 28, 1861 âÂÂ<br/>Feb 1, 1871 | rowspan=7 colspan=3 | Vacant
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=7 colspan=3 | Vacant | rowspan=7 nowrap | Feb 4, 1861 âÂÂ<br/>Feb 24, 1871 | rowspan=7 | Civil War and Reconstruction
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=3 | 13
|- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=5 | 14 |
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=6 | 14
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=4 | Elected in 1867 to finish the term, but not seated until Georgia's readmission.Retired. | rowspan=4 nowrap | Feb 1, 1871 âÂÂ<br/>Mar 3, 1873 | rowspan=4 | Republican | rowspan=4 style="text-align:right" | <br/>Joshua Hill<br /> ! rowspan=4 | 13
|- style="height:2em" ! 22 | align=left | <br/>Homer V. M. Miller<br /> | | Democratic | nowrap | Feb 24, 1871 âÂÂ<br/>Mar 3, 1871 | Elected to finish term.
|- style="height:2em" | colspan=3 | Vacant | nowrap | Mar 4, 1871 âÂÂ<br/>Nov 14, 1871 | Foster Blodgett (R) presented credentials as Senator-elect, but the Senate declared him not elected. | rowspan=4 | 15 | rowspan=2
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=3 | 23 | rowspan=3 style="text-align:left" | <br/>Thomas M. Norwood<br /> | rowspan=3 | Democratic | rowspan=3 nowrap | Nov 14, 1871 âÂÂ<br/>Mar 3, 1877 | rowspan=3 | Elected after Blodgett's credentials were rejected.Lost re-election.
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=3 | 15 | rowspan=3 | Elected in 1873. | rowspan=4 nowrap | Mar 4, 1873 âÂÂ<br/>May 26, 1880 | rowspan=4 | Democratic | rowspan=4 style="text-align:right" | <br/>John B. Gordon<br /> ! rowspan=4 | 14
|- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=4 | 24 | rowspan=4 style="text-align:left" | <br/>Benjamin Harvey Hill<br /> | rowspan=4 | Democratic | rowspan=4 nowrap | Mar 4, 1877 âÂÂ<br/>Aug 16, 1882 | rowspan=4 | Elected in 1877.Died. | rowspan=6 | 16 |
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=2 | rowspan=6 | 16 | Re-elected in 1879.Resigned to promote a venture for the Georgia Pacific Railway.
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=5 | Elected to finish Gordon's term. | rowspan=8 nowrap | May 26, 1880 âÂÂ<br/>Mar 3, 1891 | rowspan=8 | Democratic | rowspan=8 style="text-align:right" | <br/>Joseph E. Brown<br /> ! rowspan=8 | 15
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3
|- style="height:2em" | colspan=3 | Vacant | nowrap | Aug 16, 1882 âÂÂ<br/>Nov 15, 1882 |
|- style="height:2em" ! 25 | align=left | <br/>Middleton P. Barrow<br /> | | Democratic | nowrap | Nov 15, 1882 âÂÂ<br/>Mar 3, 1883 | Elected to finish Hill's term.Retired.
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=6 | 26 | rowspan=6 style="text-align:left" | <br/>Alfred H. Colquitt<br /> | rowspan=6 | Democratic | rowspan=6 nowrap | Mar 4, 1883 âÂÂ<br/>Mar 26, 1894 | rowspan=3 | Elected in 1883. | rowspan=3 | 17 |
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=3 | 17 | rowspan=3 | Re-elected in 1885.Retired due to illness.
|- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3 | Re-elected in 1888Died. | rowspan=5 | 18 |
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=5 | 18 | rowspan=5 | Elected in 1890.Retired. | rowspan=5 nowrap | Mar 4, 1891 âÂÂ<br/>Mar 3, 1897 | rowspan=5 | Democratic | rowspan=5 style="text-align:right" | <br/>John B. Gordon<br /> ! rowspan=5 | 16
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3
|- style="height:2em" | colspan=3 | Vacant | nowrap | Mar 26, 1894 âÂÂ<br/>Apr 2, 1894 |
|- style="height:2em" ! 27 | align=left | <br/>Patrick Walsh<br /> | | Democratic | nowrap | Apr 2, 1894 âÂÂ<br/>Mar 3, 1895 | Appointed to continue Colquitt's term.Elected in 1894 to finish Colquitt's term.Lost renomination.
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=13 | 28 | rowspan=13 style="text-align:left" | <br/>Augustus Octavius Bacon<br /> | rowspan=13 | Democratic | rowspan=13 nowrap | Mar 4, 1895 âÂÂ<br/> Feb 14, 1914 | rowspan=3 | Elected in 1894. | rowspan=3 | 19 |
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=3 | 19 | rowspan=3 | Elected in 1896. | rowspan=7 nowrap | Mar 4, 1897 âÂÂ<br/>Nov 13, 1910 | rowspan=7 | Democratic | rowspan=7 style="text-align:right" | <br/>Alexander S. Clay<br /> ! rowspan=7 | 17
|- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3 | Re-elected in 1900.Legislature failed to elect. | rowspan=3 | 20 |
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=3 | 20 | rowspan=3 | Re-elected in 1902. |- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=6 | Appointed to begin the next term.Re-elected in 1907.Legislature failed to elect. | rowspan=6 | 21 |
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3 | rowspan=9 | 21 | Re-elected in 1909.Died.
|- style="height:2em" | | nowrap | Nov 13, 1910 âÂÂ<br/>Nov 17, 1910 | colspan=3 | Vacant
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=2 | Appointed to continue Clay's term.Lost election to finish Clay's term. | rowspan=2 nowrap | Nov 17, 1910 âÂÂ<br/>Jul 14, 1911 | rowspan=2 | Democratic | rowspan=2 style="text-align:right" | <br/>Joseph M. Terrell<br /> ! rowspan=2 | 18
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=2
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=5 | Elected to finish Clay's term.<br/>Did not take office until Nov 16 upon resigning as Governor of Georgia. | rowspan=8 nowrap | Jul 14, 1911 âÂÂ<br/>Mar 3, 1921 | rowspan=8 | Democratic | rowspan=8 style="text-align:right" | <br/>Hoke Smith<br /> ! rowspan=8 | 19
|- style="height:2em" | Appointed to begin the term.Re-elected in 1913, the first election by popular vote.Died. | rowspan=6 | 22 | rowspan=4
|- style="height:2em" | colspan=3 | Vacant | nowrap | Feb 14, 1914 âÂÂ<br/>Mar 2, 1914 |
|- style="height:2em" ! 29 | align=left | <br/>William S. West<br /> | | Democratic | nowrap | Mar 2, 1914 âÂÂ<br/>Nov 3, 1914 | Appointed to continue Bacon's term.Successor elected.
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=3 | 30 | rowspan=3 style="text-align:left" | <br/>Thomas W. Hardwick<br /> | rowspan=3 | Democratic | rowspan=3 nowrap | Nov 4, 1914 âÂÂ<br/>Mar 3, 1919 | rowspan=3 | Elected to finish Bacon's term.Lost renomination.
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=3 | 22 | rowspan=3 | Re-elected in 1914.Lost renomination.
|- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=10 | 31 | rowspan=10 style="text-align:left" | <br/>William J. Harris<br /> | rowspan=10 | Democratic | rowspan=10 nowrap | Mar 4, 1919 âÂÂ<br/>Apr 18, 1932 | rowspan=6 | Elected in 1918. | rowspan=6 | 23 |
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=4 | rowspan=6 | 23 | Elected in 1920.Died. | nowrap | Mar 4, 1921 âÂÂ<br/>Sep 26, 1922 | | Democratic | align=right | <br/>Thomas E. Watson<br /> ! 20
|- style="height:2em" | | nowrap | Sep 26, 1922 âÂÂ<br/>Oct 3, 1922 | colspan=3 | Vacant
|- style="height:2em" | Appointed to continue Watson's term.Retired. | nowrap | Oct 3, 1922 âÂÂ<br/>Nov 21, 1922 | | Democratic | align=right | <br/>Rebecca Latimer Felton<br /> ! 21
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3 | Elected to finish Watson's term. | rowspan=21 nowrap | Nov 22, 1922 âÂÂ<br/>Jan 3, 1957 | rowspan=21 | Democratic | rowspan=21 style="text-align:right" | <br/>Walter F. George<br /> ! rowspan=21 | 22
|- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3 | Re-elected in 1924. | rowspan=3 | 24 |
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=6 | 24 | rowspan=6 | Re-elected in 1926.
|- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" | Re-elected in 1930.Died. | rowspan=6 | 25 | rowspan=4
|- style="height:2em" | colspan=3 | Vacant | nowrap | Apr 18, 1932 âÂÂ<br/>Apr 25, 1932 |
|- style="height:2em" ! 32 | align=left | <br/>John S. Cohen<br /> | | Democratic | nowrap | Apr 25, 1932 âÂÂ<br/>Jan 11, 1933 | Appointed to continue Harris's term.Successor elected.
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=21 | 33 | rowspan=21 style="text-align:left" | <br/>Richard Russell Jr.<br /> | rowspan=21 | Democratic | rowspan=21 nowrap | Jan 12, 1933 âÂÂ<br/>Jan 21, 1971 | rowspan=3 | Elected in 1932 to finish Harris's term.
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=3 | 25 | rowspan=3 | Re-elected in 1932.
|- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3 | Re-elected in 1936. | rowspan=3 | 26 |
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=3 | 26 | rowspan=3 | Re-elected in 1938.
|- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3 | Re-elected in 1942. | rowspan=3 | 27 |
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=3 | 27 | rowspan=3 | Re-elected in 1944.
|- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3 | Re-elected in 1948. | rowspan=3 | 28 |
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=3 | 28 | rowspan=3 | Re-elected in 1950.Retired.
|- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3 | Re-elected in 1954. | rowspan=3 | 29 |
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=3 | 29 | rowspan=3 | Elected in 1956. | rowspan=15 nowrap | Jan 3, 1957 âÂÂ<br/> Jan 3, 1981 | rowspan=15 | Democratic | rowspan=15 style="text-align:right" | <br/>Herman Talmadge<br /> ! rowspan=15 | 23
|- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3 | Re-elected in 1960. | rowspan=3 | 30 |
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=3 | 30 | rowspan=3 | Re-elected in 1962.
|- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3 | Re-elected in 1966.Died. | rowspan=6 | 31 |
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=6 | 31 | rowspan=6 | Re-elected in 1968.
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=4
|- style="height:2em" | colspan=3 | Vacant | nowrap | Jan 21, 1971 âÂÂ<br/>Feb 1, 1971 |
|- style="height:2em" ! 34 | align=left | <br/>David H. Gambrell<br /> | | Democratic | nowrap | Feb 1, 1971 âÂÂ<br/>Nov 7, 1972 | Appointed to continue Russell's term.Lost nomination to finish Russell's term.
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=13 | 35 | rowspan=13 style="text-align:left" | <br/>Sam Nunn<br /> | rowspan=13 | Democratic | rowspan=13 nowrap | Nov 8, 1972 âÂÂ<br/>Jan 3, 1997 | Elected to finish Russell's term.
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3 | Elected to full term in 1972. | rowspan=3 | 32 |
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=3 | 32 | rowspan=3 | Re-elected in 1974.Lost re-election.
|- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3 | Re-elected in 1978. | rowspan=3 | 33 |
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=3 | 33 | rowspan=3 | Elected in 1980.Lost re-election. | rowspan=3 nowrap | Jan 3, 1981 âÂÂ<br/>Jan 3, 1987 | rowspan=3 | Republican | rowspan=3 style="text-align:right" | <br/>Mack Mattingly<br /> ! rowspan=3 | 24
|- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3 | Re-elected in 1984. | rowspan=3 | 34 |
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=3 | 34 | rowspan=3 | Elected in 1986.Lost re-election. | rowspan=3 nowrap | Jan 3, 1987 âÂÂ<br/>Jan 3, 1993 | rowspan=3 | Democratic | rowspan=3 style="text-align:right" | <br/>Wyche Fowler<br /> ! rowspan=3 | 25
|- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3 | Re-elected in 1990.Retired. | rowspan=3 | 35 |
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=3 | 35 | rowspan=3 | Elected in 1992 in runoff election. | rowspan=4 nowrap | Jan 3, 1993 âÂÂ<br/>Jul 18, 2000 | rowspan=4 | Republican | rowspan=4 style="text-align:right" | <br/>Paul Coverdell<br /> ! rowspan=4 | 26
|- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=5 | 36 | rowspan=5 style="text-align:left" | <br/>Max Cleland<br /> | rowspan=5 | Democratic | rowspan=5 nowrap | Jan 3, 1997 âÂÂ<br/>Jan 3, 2003 | rowspan=5 | Elected in 1996.Lost re-election. | rowspan=5 | 36 |
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3 | rowspan=5 | 36 | Re-elected in 1998.Died.
|- style="height:2em" | | nowrap | July 18, 2000 âÂÂ<br/>July 27, 2000 | colspan=3 | Vacant
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3 | Appointed to continue Coverdell's term.Elected in 2000 to finish Coverdell's term.Retired. | rowspan=3 nowrap | July 27, 2000 âÂÂ<br/>Jan 3, 2005 | rowspan=3 | Democratic | rowspan=3 style="text-align:right" | <br/>Zell Miller<br /> ! rowspan=3 | 27
|- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=6 | 37 | rowspan=6 style="text-align:left" | <br/>Saxby Chambliss<br /> | rowspan=6 | Republican | rowspan=6 nowrap | Jan 3, 2003 âÂÂ<br/>Jan 3, 2015 | rowspan=3 | Elected in 2002. | rowspan=3 | 37 |
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=3 | 37 | rowspan=3 | Elected in 2004. | rowspan=8 nowrap | Jan 3, 2005 âÂÂ<br/>Dec 31, 2019 | rowspan=8 | Republican | rowspan=8 style="text-align:right" | <br/>Johnny Isakson<br /> ! rowspan=8 | 28
|- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3 | Re-elected in 2008 in runoff election.Retired. | rowspan=3 | 38 |
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=3 | 38 | rowspan=3 | Re-elected in 2010.
|- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=5 | 38 | rowspan=5 style="text-align:left" | <br/>David Perdue<br /> | rowspan=5 | Republican | rowspan=5 nowrap | Jan 3, 2015 âÂÂ<br/>Jan 3, 2021 | rowspan=5 | Elected in 2014.Term expired before runoff election.Lost re-election. | rowspan=5 | 39 |
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=6 | 39 | rowspan=2 | Re-elected in 2016.Resigned.
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=3
|- style="height:2em" | | nowrap | Dec 31, 2019 âÂÂ<br/>Jan 6, 2020 | colspan=3 | Vacant
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=2 | Appointed to continue Isakson's term.Lost election to finish Isakson's term. | rowspan=2 nowrap | Jan 6, 2020 âÂÂ<br/>Jan 20, 2021 | rowspan=2 | Republican | rowspan=2 style="text-align:right" | <br/>Kelly Loeffler<br /> ! rowspan=2 | 29
|- style="height:2em" | colspan=3 | Vacant | nowrap | Jan 3, 2021 âÂÂ<br/>Jan 20, 2021 | | rowspan=4 | 40 | rowspan=2
|- style="height:2em" ! rowspan=3 | 39 | rowspan=3 style="text-align:left" | <br/>Jon Ossoff<br /> | rowspan=3 | Democratic | rowspan=3 nowrap | Jan 20, 2021 âÂÂ<br/>present | rowspan=3 | Elected in 2021 in runoff election. | Elected in 2021 in runoff election to finish Isakson's term. | rowspan=4 nowrap | Jan 20, 2021 âÂÂ<br/>present | rowspan=4 | Democratic | rowspan=4 style="text-align:right" | <br/>Raphael Warnock<br /> ! rowspan=4 | 30
|- style="height:2em" | | rowspan=3 | 40 | rowspan=3 | Re-elected in 2022 in runoff election.
|- style="height:2em" |
|- style="height:2em" | rowspan=2 colspan=5 | To be determined in the 2026 election. | rowspan=2| 41 |
|- style="height:2em" | | 41 | colspan=6 | To be determined in the 2028 election.