Elections were held in South Dakota on November 2, 2010. Primary elections took place on June 8, 2010 for the Democratic Party, Republican Party, and Constitution Party.
See main article: United States Senate election in South Dakota, 2010.
See also: United States Senate elections, 2010. Republican incumbent John Thune ran for re-election.
See main article: United States House of Representatives election in South Dakota, 2010.
See also: United States House of Representatives elections, 2010. Democratic incumbent Stephanie Herseth Sandlin ran for re-election.
See main article: South Dakota gubernatorial election, 2010.
See also: United States gubernatorial elections, 2010. Mike Rounds, the Republican Governor, was term-limited and did not seek re-election in 2010. Five candidates ran for the Republican nomination. The winner of the Republican primary faced Democratic State Senator Scott Heidepriem in the general election.
The offices of Lieutenant Governor, Secretary of State, 2010 South Dakota Attorney General election, Treasurer, Auditor, Commissioner of School and Public Lands, and Public Utility Commissioner were all up for election in 2010. Candidates for each party were nominated at the 2010 state conventions of each political party.
All thirty-five seats of the South Dakota Senate were up for election in 2010.
All seventy seats in the South Dakota House of Representatives were up for election in 2010.
Multiple judicial positions were up for election in 2010.
Four measures were certified for the November 2 ballot:
1. Protects the right to secret ballots in federal, state, and union representation elections
2. Repeals the automatic annual transfer of $12 million from the trust fund to the state general fund
3. Extends smoking ban to apply statewide
4. Proposes legalization of medical marijuana
County offices including County Commissioners, County Auditors, County Registers of Deeds, and County Sheriffs were up for election in 2010.
In its closed primary election on June 8, party members elected delegates to the Republican Party State Convention and the Democratic Party State Convention.