Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews and Liberal leader Matthew Guy are making their final pitches to voters, as the state prepares to head to the polls tomorrow.
The premier bucked tradition by voting early, joining more than 1.63 million Victorians who have cast early ballots.
Victorian Electoral Commission (VEC) data shows more than one in three eligible Victorians have already voted, including 263,849 yesterday.
Mr Andrews posted a photo on social media showing him, wife Cath and children Noah and Grace casting their ballots.
"Like so many other Victorians, we've got a few things happening on Saturday so we voted early and on the way to somewhere else," he said.
Mr Andrews later said it was a "special election" for his family, with two of his children voting in a state poll for the first time, and the early vote was to work around schedules.
"Having us all in one place is quite challenging," he said.
"Last night meant we were able to vote together, and I wanted to be with my two adult kids the first time they voted,."
The VEC data also showed a total of 272,779 postal votes had already been returned.
Opposition Leader Matthew Guy is expected to vote tomorrow morning in his electorate of Bulleen, in Melbourne's east.
At the 2018 election, the Opposition Leader cast his vote on November 14 – 10 days early.
Opposition appeal for Victorians to 'move on'
Mr Guy began Friday in the regional centre of Ballarat, where he said Saturday's election was about "the chance for Victoria to move on from the last few years".
"Don't wake up on Sunday with a Daniel Andrews hangover – change the government," Mr Guy said.
"We need a government and a premier who unite us, not divide us."
He defended the Coalition's costings released on Thursday, saying the numbers added up and the commitments had been assessed independently.
He said his plan would leave Victoria in a better financial position.
"From our point of view the most responsible thing economically is to try to pay down that debt," Mr Guy said.
Earlier, Mr Guy did not answer a question on ABC News Breakfast about whether he will continue on as leader of the Victorian Liberals if the party loses the election.
"I'm not focused on anything else, but winning," he said.
Meanwhile, Greens leader Samantha Ratnam said she felt the state was on the cusp of a "historic" result for her party.
"We're looking really hopeful in Melbourne, Brunswick and Prahran, the seats we currently hold, and we're hopeful of picking up seats like Richmond and Northcote and we're also within reach in seats like Albert Park and Pascoe Vale," she said.
In the final few weeks of campaigning, the party leaders have been zig-zagging across Victoria.
Premier rolls out pre-election kinder sweetener
In a final announcement before election day, Mr Andrews said a Labor government would provide every kindergarten in the state with $5,000 grants for new play equipment and toys.
The $24 million package includes funding for new bush kindergartens and bilingual kindergartens, as well as support for new and existing toy libraries.
Mr Andrews said Labor was offering voters a "positive and optimistic" plan.
"A vote for Labor is a vote to bring back the SEC. A vote for Labor is a vote for free kinder," he said.
The Premier was asked about whether he would make deals with independents and minority parties to form government after the elected, if needed.
"No deal offered, no deal done. A strong, stable majority government in our state is what we need," he said.
Mr Andrews criticised the opposition's reliance on using money from the state's future fund in its costings.
"We created the future fund for the future, not to clean it out," he said.
VEC urges people to 'vote nicely' after reports of violence
VEC communications head Sue Lang said the commission was expecting about half of eligible Victorians to have already voted through early and postal voting before the polls opened on election day.
She told ABC Melbourne's Mornings radio program there had been issues with poor behaviour at voting centres in the lead-up to the election.
Ms Lang said members of the public had complained about feeling "harassed or intimidated" by party workers at early polling booths.
"There's been some pushing and shoving by party workers against each other," she said.
"I believe yesterday police were called because even some punches were thrown."
She called on people to "be very calm and respectful to each other".
"This is Australia, not America," she said
"We would like everybody to be able to vote nicely and in peace."
The Premier made his post about voting early on Thursday evening, just hours after both major parties released their costings behind their election promises.
Both Labor and the Liberals have been criticised by an economist for relying on the use of contingency funds to promise budget surpluses in excess of $1 billion in three years' time.