Thomson Reuters
The poll, from ABC and The Washington Post, found that 51% of Americans approve of Obama's job performance, up 6 points from July.
It's the first time since May 2013 that the president's approval ratings have soared above 50%. The pollsters attributed the rise to improving sentiment about the strength of the US economy.
Obama's approval numbers could prove especially important for the candidates vying to succeed him in office.
The current president's approval rating has traditionally a key bellwether in predicting whether someone from his own party or from the opposite side succeeds him - although the sample size of modern presidential successions is rather small. According to Republican pollster Frank Luntz, no president with an approval rating below 50% has passed the torch to someone in his party in more than seven decades:
No exiting president with approval rating below 50% has passed the White House to his party's nominee in 75 years.https://t.co/vebfDLUWng
- Frank Luntz (@FrankLuntz) October 19, 2015
"He believes we must win this election. Everything he and the President have worked for - and care about - is at stake," Ted Kaufman, Biden's former chief of staff who replaced him in the Senate, wrote to Biden alumni last week.
Here's a look at how Obama's approval rating has swung throughout his time in office:
Langer Research/ABC/Washington Post