Early voting in the city has officially ended, and more than one million people throughout the five boroughs have now cast their ballots.

Over the course of the nine-day early voting period, 1,089,328 city residents voted, according to the New York City Board of Elections, which posted the data to X Sunday evening.

The number falls just short of the city’s 2020 early voting turnout, when 1.1 million people cast their ballots.

Brooklyn and Manhattan lead the pack with 345,840 and 282,533, respectively, followed by Queens, the Bronx and Staten Island.

Staten Island, however, has the highest percentage of early voters relative to its population size.

Sunday saw 149,319 residents casting their ballots, the BOE said in a statement after the polls closed. The agency said Monday that Sunday was "the highest early voting day in NYC history."

Across New York state, a total of 2,985,181 people took part in early voting, with polling places seeing the highest turnout on the first day, Saturday, Oct. 26, when 379,426 votes were cast. 

Polls are closed Monday, but will reopen at 6 a.m. Tuesday and stay open until 9 p.m.

Candidates are not the only items on the ballot. New Yorkers will also have to vote "yes" or "no" on six ballot measures. To find out more about each measure, click here.

For more information on this year's election, check out NY1’s Voter Guide before you head out to the polls.