The doors to the Statue of Liberty will reopen Monday — despite the fed shutdown of all non-essential government services.

Gov. Cuomo announced Sunday the beacon-handed beauty, who stands on US Park land, would continue to let visitors in through $65,000 a day in state funding.

“She’s resting, she deserves it,” Cuomo said at a Sunday press conference before the shuttered landmark. “She’s had a stressful few weeks but she’s gonna go back to work tomorrow, and that’s what were here to announce.”

To keep Liberty Island open for business, the state arranged with the US Department of Interior to temporarily pay federal workers’ salaries out of its own tourism budget.

The arrangement will last for the duration of the shutdown and includes Ellis Island.

But it didn’t help tourists who had planned their visits for Sunday. Jennifer Moon, 38, a commercial administrator from Leicester, England said she was bummed because she put a visit to the statue on her bucket list.

“I just don’t understand it really,” she said of the shutdown. “They can’t agree on a budget, but then they’re losing out on money.”

Cuomo said allowing the statue to close down would have amounted to a monumental economic blunder because of the all the tourist dollars the state would lose as a result.

“When the Statue of Liberty closes it disrupts many tourists’ plans,” he said. “From our point of view, it’s a good investment because the revenue we gain from the tourists is multiples of what it will cost to actually pay to open the Statue of Liberty.”

During a similar federal shutdown in 2013, it took the state 12 days to reopen Lady Liberty. But Cuomo — who slammed President Trump and Republicans for the latest stoppage — said the state has learned its lesson since then.

“The initial thought in 2013 was it was going to be a short-lived shutdown. It wasn’t. It went on a number of days,” Cuomo said. “We learned our lesson. This time we’re stepping in immediately. We don’t want any break in the tourism schedule.”

The federal government shut down early Saturday morning as Democrats and Republicans continued to remain deadlocked over Trump’s proposed all along the Mexican border and the fate of thousands of undocumented immigrants who came to the US illegally as children.

The immigrants — known commonly as Dreamers — are facing deportation after Trump rescinded an executive order issued by President Obama granting them the ability to remain legally. Trump has dangled the possibility of allowing the Dreamers to stay if Democrats go along with his plans for the wall.

“I also think in many ways the Statue of Liberty is symbolic for what’s going on right now in Washington,” Cuomo said. “You listen to their rhetoric — they don’t want anyone from those s-hole companies, just Norwegians … You don’t even need a Statue of Liberty, we put a little plaque ‘just Norwegians welcome’ — be very simple.”