Federal officials say the US will have the capacity to perform as many as 1 million coronavirus tests by the end of the week — but a lawmaker is calling out the feds for deleting the number of Americans undergoing testing from a website.

Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Stephen Hahn said new regulatory guidelines will allow more labs to develop and verify their own tests, The Hill reported.

“With this new policy we’ve heard from multiple companies and multiple academic centers, and we expect to have a substantial increase in the number of tests this week, next week and throughout the month,” Hahn said.

“The estimates that we’re getting from industry right now, by the end of this week close to 1 million tests will be able to be performed.”

The expansion of testing comes as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported Tuesday that there are at least 91 cases of the COVID-19 virus in 15 states.

Meanwhile, Democratic Wisconsin Rep. Mark Pocan put the CDC on blast after he says the agency stopped reporting online the number of patients tested, as well as the death toll from the epidemic.

“Inexplicably, today, the CDC’s public webpage dedicated COVID-19 data no longer displays how many persons have been tested for, or who have died from COVID-19,” he wrote in a letter Monday to the agency. “I would like to know why.”

The US death toll rose Tuesday to nine, all of which were in suburbs of Seattle.