In less than 24 hours, polling stations will open nationwide and Americans will get to vote for who they want their next president to be.

The latest ABC/Washington Post poll shows president Obama leading in the final sprint to the White House with 50 percent of likely voters on his side and 47 percent on Mitt Romney's.

Earlier Monday afternoon, the race became too close to call as a CNN/ORC International poll indicated that 49 percent of likely voters supported President Obama and GOP presidential nominee Mitt Romney.

The poll showed that 52 percent of likely voters have a favorable viewed of Obama and 51 percent viewed Romney as favorable.

Sixty percent of likely voters believe Obama will win the election tomorrow and 36 percent think Romney will win. The poll also finds that 51 percent of likely voters approve of Obama's job performance.

The CNN's Electoral College Map indicates that 95 of electoral votes are unallocated. This means that the president has 237 electoral votes and Romney has 207. The total electoral votes needed to win is 270.

"There are many good signs in the poll for Obama," the pollsters wrote in their report released on Sunday.

"He has regained much of the ground he lost following his lackluster performance in the first presidential debate. In mid-September, Obama led Romney by eight points among likely voters, but in early October, shortly after the debate, he trailed by four points."

An NBC News/Wall Street Journal Survey shows the president leading his challenger 48 percent to 47 percent; an ABC News/Washington Post poll shows Obama leading with 49 percent to 48 percent; a Fox News poll shows a dead heat at 46 percent.

In one final push, both candidates are criss-crossing the nation in crucial battleground states from New Hampshire to Ohio.