US election 2020: Biden takes lead in key state of Georgia as Trump ramps up unfounded fraud claims
As votes continue to be counted in Georgia, Mr Biden is now leading in the normally-Republican state by 1,096 votes.
He has 253 Electoral College votes and needs 270 to win - Georgia would hand him 16 votes taking him to 269.
The pair are in a statistical dead heat in the state, locked on 49.4% each.
Under state law, if the margin between the two candidates is under half a percentage point, a recount can be requested.
The development comes after Mr Trump made his first public appearance for 36 hours.
The president said "we can't allow anyone to silence our voters and manufacture results" - but declined to offer any evidence for his allegations of corruption and wide-scale ballot tampering.
He insisted during a White House speech that "if you count the legal votes, I easily win", despite no victor having been announced yet and Joe Biden leading in both the Electoral College and the popular vote.
Several US news networks stopped broadcasting the president's address after he shared unfounded claims of fraud in states where Mr Biden is eating into his lead.
ABC, NBC, MSNBC, CBS and USA Today were among the broadcasters who cut away from the event before it finished.
Earlier, Mr Biden declared "each ballot must be counted" and urged people to "stay calm" because "the process is working".
He said he felt "very good about where we stand", adding he had "no doubt" he will be declared the winner.
It comes as five nail-biting races in battleground states remain too close to call after many hours of counting.
Mr Biden is just 17 Electoral College votes short of the 270 either candidate needs to clinch the White House.
If he takes Pennsylvania, where Mr Trump is ahead but seeing his lead gradually shrink, that would give Mr Biden 20 more and push him over the line.
If he fails to flip the key state from red to blue, then the remaining races in Georgia, Arizona, North Carolina and Nevada will make for an even tighter finale.
A win in Georgia would put Mr Biden one Electoral College vote away from the presidency, although the remote possibility of a tie on 269 votes each remains.
However, Mr Trump would need to win all of the other five states, something that is considered unlikely at this stage.
On election night, Mr Trump claimed victory before key results had been announced and accused his political opponents of a "fraud on the American public" without providing any evidence, demanding counts in four states to cease.
In his latest remarks, the president promised there will be "a lot of litigation" because "they're trying to steal an election, they're trying to rig an election and we can't let that happen".
Despite his campaign being pressed repeatedly for proof to verify those accounts, Mr Trump offered none - only vowing: "It's going to end up perhaps at the highest court in the land."
But Mr Biden's team hit back, calling the intervention "desperate, baseless and a sure sign he's losing".
Mr Trump's son, Donald Jr, has called for him to "go to total war" over the "cheating" - again unsubstantiated - "that has been going on for far too long".
The president has launched legal action in several states in a bid to halt counting, but already had one bid denied in Michigan.
It is possible the race for the presidency will be dragged out into a third day.