With 90 days until the election, it’s that time in the campaign season where political ads start to consume the airwaves.

Joe Biden is about to increase his presence in several states thanks to the largest ad reservation in the presidential race. His campaign is reportedly prepared to put $280 million toward TV and digital ads. The AP says this is “nearly twice the amount President Donald Trump’s team has reserved.”

The Biden campaign announced in a Wednesday memo it’s reserving $220 million in television airtime and $60 million in digital ads, in contrast to the $147 million the Trump campaign has reserved, according to a review of Kantar/CMAG data by The Associated Press. Both campaigns can add to or subtract from their reservations at any time.

The New York Times reports that the buy would focus on both swing states and traditionally red states as well. Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Georgia, and Texas are all on the list.

Mr. Biden’s campaign declined to say how much it was spending in any particular state, but the initial ad buy included 10 states that Mr. Trump carried in 2016 (the five above plus Florida, North Carolina, Arizona, Ohio and Iowa) and five that Hillary Clinton won (Minnesota, Nevada, New Hampshire, Colorado and Virginia).

In a memo, Biden campaign manager Jen O’Malley Dillon wrote:

“This reservation lays the groundwork for a paid media program that enables our campaign to communicate directly with a broad swath of the electorate, letting voters hear directly from Vice President Biden speaking to the moment we’re in — the COVID-19 pandemic and economic crisis that has left millions jobless — and see a demonstration of the type of leadership that’s so badly missing from the White House right now.”