Super Tuesday was less than super for thousands of voters who cast early ballots for Amy Klobucher and Pete Buttigieg, with many moaning that they had wasted their vote on candidates who later dropped out before the pivotal primary day.

Democratic Party and state officials in Colorado and Utah say early voters swamped them with requests to recast their ballots because they voted before the two major Democratic presidential candidates withdrew, according to a report.

“When Pete Buttigieg dropped out, we had a lot of voters who wanted to know if they could vote over, and later on Amy Klobuchar dropped out,” Salt Late County Clerk Sherrie Swensen told Fox News.

“But we were already answering phone calls, emails from voters who wanted to know because they had submitted their vote by mail ballot or voted early if they could have a chance to vote over.”

The Utah official told the network that the county had received “hundreds” of calls from early voters who wanted to know what would happen to their ballot if they voted for Buttigieg or Klobuchar before either suspended their campaigns.

Swensen sympathized with the voters’ plight, but added that unfortunately, there are no redos for early voters.

“I mean it’s just sad because so many calls, so many emails — ‘Can I have another chance to vote again?’” she asked.

Jeff Merchant, chairman of the UDP, confirmed the report to The Post, saying, “Mr. Buttigieg was supported by upwards of 18 percent of Utahans prior to his announcement to withdraw, and many were disappointed to not have the chance to change their vote. ‘Hundreds’ was not a misstatement.”

In Colorado, early voters for Buttigieg and Klobuchar expressed similar concerns.

“We’ve definitely gotten a fair amount of calls and emails. We’ve been really trying to be proactive and we’ve tried to utilize our social media channels to kind of head off some of those phone calls and emails,” Steve Hurlbert, a spokesman for the Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold, told Fox.

Griswold was more direct on Twitter.

“If you turned in a ballot voted for a candidate who is no longer in the race, you cannot vote again. If you haven’t turned in your ballot yet, you can get a new ballot or vote in-person before 7pm on Tuesday,” she wrote.

In Texas, one voter told the Texas Tribune he’d learned his lesson.

“Maybe if I’m planning to vote for the front-runner I can do so ahead of time,” said Justin Sunseri, who voted for Buttigieg.

If not, he said: “I’ll wait until election day,” he said.

The Texas Secretary of State said about 1 million people had already cast ballots in the Democratic primary.

In California, at least 750,000 Democrats had returned ballots ahead of time, while at least 158,000 Arkansans cast early votes in the election, according to the secretary of state’s office.

Virginia’s early voting numbers were higher than in 2016, even though there is only one primary this year as the Republicans cancelled theirs.

In Massachusetts, Secretary of the Commonwealth William Galvin told WCVB5 that about 230,000 voters took advantage of early voting last week, the first time the state has allowed early voting in a presidential primary.

Of those, about 190,000 were in the Democratic primary, he added.

As of Friday, more than 94,000 Minnesotans had requested absentee ballots, mostly for the DFL (Democratic/Farm/Labor) presidential primary.

More than 57,000 DFL ballots had been accepted,Secretary of State Steve Simon’s office told Minnesota Public Radio.

And a large number of not a majority likely voted for Klobuchar, who represents the state in the Senate.

As of Monday, 353,000 Utah residents’ early ballots had been received by county clerks around the state, Fox 13 reported, compared to the state’s last primary, which was in 2008, when the overall total was 428,000, with no early voting.