After completing her
Abitur in 1994 at the Heinrich-Hertz-Gymnasium in
Erfurt, Wolf studied
social work at the University of Applied Sciences Erfurt and graduated with a diploma in 1999. From January to August 1999 she worked as a researcher for the Landtag of Thuringia. In the
1999 Thuringian state election, she was elected at an age of 23 to the
Thuringian state parliament for
The Left Thuringia. Wolf became chair of the Equal Opportunities Committee (
Gleichstellungsausschuss) and environmental policy spokesperson for the parliamentary group. She has been a member of the Eisenach city council since 2004. In the
2009 Thuringian state election, Wolf won the direct mandate in the constituency of Wartburgkreis II - Eisenach. For the Left, she was chairwoman of the Equal Opportunities Committee and environmental policy spokesperson for the parliamentary group. For the 2012 Thuringian municipal elections, Wolf stood as a candidate for mayor of the city of Eisenach. On 6 May 2012, she was elected mayor with 51.6% of the vote. On 15 June 2015, a recall petition filed by the
National Democratic Party of Germany (NPD) in city council also attracted considerable attention beyond the region when 16 out of 34 city councillors voted in favour of the motion in secret ballot, although the NPD had only three seats. She is the lead candidate for
Bündnis Sahra Wagenknecht in the
2024 Thuringian state election. She was elected, and the party got 15 seats and third place after the AfD and CDU. Wolf negotiated for the BSW Thuringia with the CDU and
SPD about a coalition in Thuringia. At the end of October 2024, the three parties presented a paper that recognized the parties' different positions on foreign policy. The Federal Executive Board led by Sahra Wagenkencht consequently opposed the decision to start coalition negotiations. A
Blackberry coalition would be formed. After the poor result for BSW in the
2025 German Federal election, Wagenknecht said in 2025, that BSWs participation in the government in Thuringia was also responsible for the fail. Wagenknecht accused state organization leader Katja Wolf of being partly responsible for the BSW's poor performance in the federal election. In April 2025, a month-long power struggle between the Thuringian BSW and Sarah Wagenknecht was resolved. Thuringia's Deputy Prime Minister Katja Wolf remained BSW state organization leader and won a contested candidacy against state parliament member
Anke Wirsing, who was supported by party founder Wagenknecht. Wolf has no religious affiliation. Wolf is married and has two children. == Positions ==