Biden will get a first-hand look at the damage and meet with first responders, survivors and federal, state and local officials, the White House said in a statement.
"I remain committed to delivering everything the people of Hawaii need as they recover from this disaster," Biden said in a post on the social media platform X, previously known as Twitter.
Hawaii Governor Josh Green has warned the death toll could double.
Hundreds of people are still unaccounted for from the blaze.
Twenty cadaver dogs have led teams on a block-by-block search that has covered 38% of the disaster area as of Tuesday.
The number of dogs would increase to 40, Green said at a press conference in which he announced the death toll had risen to 110, up from 106 previously.
The inferno spread rapidly from grasslands outside town into Lahaina last Tuesday (local time), catching people by surprise and charring a 5-square-mile (13-square-km) area of town in hours.
The fire destroyed 2,200 buildings and caused an estimated $5.5 billion (NZ$9.3b) in damage, officials said.
The federal government so far has disbursed $2.3 million in assistance to families, and approved more than 1,300 registrations for assistance, Criswell said in Wednesday's briefing.
Identification of remains has been slow, in part because of the intensity of the fire.
Maui County released the first two names of those deceased on Tuesday: Robert Dyckman, 74, and Buddy Jantoc, 79, both of Lahaina. Three other individuals have been identified but their names have been withheld pending family notification. The other remains await identification, Maui County said.
To assist with identification and processing of remains, the US government has deployed additional experts from a disaster mortuary operational response team, increasing the number of personnel to 75, Jonathan Greene a Health and Human Services official, said.
The team includes corners, pathologists, X-ray technicians and lab technicians. A disaster portable morgue unit landed in Hawaii with more than 22 tons of supplies and equipment including mortuary examination tables and laboratory equipment to support the collection of DNA in the identification of victims.
As officials work to identify the deceased, stories about those injured or killed in the flames have emerged from loved ones.
Laurie Allen was burned over 70% of her body when the car she was escaping in was blocked by a downed tree, forcing her to flee across a burning field, according to a GoFundMe post by her family. She is burned to the bone in some places, but doctors hope she will regain partial use of her arms, the post said.
"The Burn Team has expressed more than once that she shouldn't be alive!" a relative wrote on the page. Allen is now at a burn centre in Oahu, according to the fundraiser post.
The incongruous sight of tourists enjoying Maui's tropical beaches while search-and-rescue teams trawl building ruins and waters for victims of the deadliest US wildfire in more than a century has outraged some residents.