Merkel campaigned on her record as chancellor for 12 years, emphasising the country's record-low unemployment, strong economic growth, balanced budget and growing international importance.
That's helped keep her conservative bloc well atop the polls ahead of today's election over the center-left Social Democrats of challenger Martin Schulz.
Schulz voted together with his wife Inge in the city hall of his hometown of Wuerselen in western Germany.
Merkel's conservative Christian Democratic Party and its sister party, the Bavaria-only Christian Social Union, have governed the country for the last four years with the Social Democrats in a so-called "grand coalition." Most forecasts suggest that coalition will win another majority in today's election outcome, but several different coalition government combinations could be possible.
Pollsters said earlier in the week that many of the 61.5 million who were eligible to vote had remained undecided until the very last moment. That included Bernhard Sommerfeld, a 62 -year-old book seller, who cast his vote today morning in Berlin after the opening of the polling stations at 8 am (local time).
Only a few people came to the polling stations on a cold and drizzly morning in the German capital, which also hosted its annual marathon today. Many streets in the city were blocked as runners zigzagged their way through Berlin in an often festive mood with local bands playing on street corners and bystanders cheering and applauding.
Jens Schubert, an orchestra manager, also said this election was a difficult one for him.
"I usually vote for the same party from the left spectrum the Green Party but this time I voted for a different party," the 54-year-old said as he came out of a polling station in Berlin's Mitte neighbourhood where Merkel was also expected to cast her vote later in the day.
Germany's president, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, appealed to his fellow citizens to go out and cast their vote, because "these elections are also about the future of democracy and the future of Europe."
Countries across Europe have seen a rise of anti-migrant and populist parties in recent elections and several German pollsters have forecast that the anti-migrant, anti-Europe AfD, which appears assured of gaining seats in the national parliament for the first time, may come in as third-strongest party.
In addition to the AfD, the Greens, the Free Democratic Party and the Left Party were all poised to enter parliament with poll numbers between 8 and 11 per cent.
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