First lady Jill Biden to travel to Tokyo for Olympics opening ceremony

The first lady is making the international trip despite COVID-19 concerns.

To address some of those concerns, organizers unveiled a series of "playbooks" with new rules and guidelines for how they plan to hold a safe and successful competition in Tokyo this summer amid the pandemic. The rules include a ban on spectators, a ban on cheering, mandatory COVID-19 testing, a quarantine period and more.

It's unclear if members of delegations like the first lady will have to follow the same rules as other spectators.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said last month that the president would not attend the Olympics, but would send a U.S. delegation, as has been tradition.

"He will certainly be rooting for the athletes," she said. "We will have a delegation from the United States, as we have historically had. But we will continue to also convey the public health guidelines and guidance that we've been -- we've been delivering out there about only essential travel."

Tokyo entered its fourth state of emergency due to COVID-19 last week, imposing restrictions that will last through the games.

Amid the surge, asked last month whether the first lady would attend, President Joe Biden said they were working on it.

"Well, we're trying to work that out now," he told White House reporters as he departed for a trip to Wisconsin. "That's the plan."

The visit is slated to be Jill Biden's first solo international trip since becoming first lady. Last month, she joined Biden for the first leg of his first international trip as president.

In 2010, under then-President Barack Obama, the Bidens led the U.S. delegation to the Winter Games in Canada.

ABC News' Morgan Winsor contributed to this report.