Gov. Andrew Cuomo reversed his plan to make New York car owners pay $25 to replace their license plates once the plates are at least 10 years old, his office revealed Tuesday.

The announcement comes a week after online voters chose a plate that did not include the bridge named after the governor’s dad and hours after a new poll showed widespread opposition to the plate replacement plan.

In a statement, Cuomo adviser Rich Azzopardi claimed officials reversed the policy “weeks ago,” and that the poll by Siena College researchers therefore reflected “outdated information.”

Azzopardi pointed to comments from DMV Commissioner Mark Schroeder. He claimed that Cuomo and his team have said, via Schroeder, that they were “committed to working with the Legislature” on a solution that allowed drivers with relatively intact license plates to keep them regardless of when the plates were issued.

In fact, Schroeder’s Aug. 29 statement put the onus on the Legislature.

“If the Legislature can agree to a cost-effective and practical plate inspection mechanism to determine what plates are still in good operating condition after the 10-year life and thus do not need to be replaced, we would welcome the opportunity to be cooperative,” he said at the time.

The governor’s plan was scheduled to take effect next spring. In addition to the $25 replacement fee, drivers who wanted to keep their old plate numbers would have had to pay $20 to do so.

By a tally of 60 percent to 31 percent, New Yorkers were against requiring drivers to replace the plates, according to the Siena survey.

And by an even greater, three-to-one margin, voters said the $25 replacement fee was unfair — with 75 percent expressing disapproval and only 23 percent saying the fee was reasonable.