A Democratic Michigan senator wants more information from Vice President Mike Pence about his stay at President Trump’s golf club in Ireland — more than 180 miles from his Dublin sit-downs with the country’s leaders.

“I write with concern that, at President Trump’s ‘suggestion,’ you decided to stay at the Trump International Golf Links & Hotel in the village of Doonbeg during your official visit to Ireland,” Sen. Gary Peters, ranking member of the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, wrote in a letter to the veep, The Hill reported.

Peters’ concerns echoed those of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other leading Democrats that US taxpayers were footing the bill for the visit by Pence and his entourage.

“This raises serious concerns about wasteful expenditures and possible conflicts of interest related to taxpayer-funded travel by this Administration,” Peters wrote, adding that the trip “creates the risk that taxpayer funds are being used to directly profit the President.”

Pence’s staff and Trump have offered contradictory accounts of Pence’s visit to Doonbeg, where one of his great-grandmothers was raised.

A top aide for Pence, Marc Short, told reporters that Pence booked his stay at Trump’s club at the commander-in-chief’s “suggestion.”

But the president on Wednesday said he was unaware of Pence’s decision.

“I had no involvement, other than it’s a great place. It wasn’t my idea for Mike to go there,” Trump told reporters at the White House.

“I don’t suggest anything. I have a lot of hotels all over the place, and people, they use them because they’re the best.”

Peters wants Pence to reveal the total cost of his trip, including the specific amount spent at the Trump property for him and his family, and disclose whether his team had looked into potentially cheaper digs in Dublin.

Pence defended the visit, citing his family ties and arguing that staying at a Trump property that was already under Secret Service protection made sense.

“I understand political attacks by Democrats, but if you have a chance to get to Doonbeg, you’ll find it’s a fairly small place, and the opportunity to stay at Trump National in Doonbeg, to accommodate the unique footprint that comes with our security detail and other personnel, made it logical,” the veep told reporters this week.

Peters scoffed at that explanation, asserting that he found it “hard to believe that your office was unable to identify lodgings that could accommodate the security and logistical needs of your trip in the capital of Ireland.”

Meanwhile, Pelosi’s office issued a scathing critique of the president that accused him of profiting from his properties while in office — and for pushing his Doral golf resort in Miami for next year’s G-7 summit.

“President Trump is violating the Constitution by making money off of his lavish, ritzy resort properties, ultimately prioritizing his profits over the interests of the American people,” her office said in the statement.

“First, Trump suggested holding the G7 Summit at his Doral golf resort in Florida. Now, the White House is walking back their previous statements that Trump personally suggested Pence stay at his Doonbeg hotel in Ireland, which would be yet another example of the President’s self-dealing.”

Peters in February released a Government Accountability Office report that shows Trump’s trips to his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida from Feb. 3 through March 5, 2017, alone cost taxpayers $13.6 million.

Trump did not place his assets in a blind trust when he took office, but instead handed control of his company to his two adult sons, Donald Jr. and Eric, though he can still profit from the businesses.

Spokeswomen for the president and vice president did not immediately respond to The Post’s requests for comment.