At this rate, Alex Rodriguez will have a plaque in Monument Park by the end of the weekend.

On a day when the Yankees donated $150,000 to a charity so Rodriguez could get the home-run ball from the 3,000th hit of his career, the two sides also ended their simmering feud over the $6 million bonus he potentially was due for tying Willie Mays on the all-time home run list on May 1 by agreeing to donate the money to charity.

In a statement released jointly by MLB and the Players Association, the two sides announced they had “amicably resolved their potential dispute” regarding the bonus.

According to the statement, $3.5 million of the initial $6 million figure will be donated to an assortment of charities. Specifically, $1 million will go to charities including Special Warriors Foundation and Boys & Girls Club of Tampa.

The remaining $2.5 million will be donated to the MLB Urban Youth Foundation, with commissioner Rob Manfred consulting Rodriguez about which initiatives the money will support.

“I just thought it was important to do the right thing,” Rodriguez said. “Turning a negative situation perhaps into a positive one. I think we all did the right thing.”

In the process, Rodriguez thanked the Yankees, the league and the union — all former nemeses — “for all their all hard work.”

He even forgave Zack Hample, the ball hawk who came up with No. 3,000 on June 19 when Rodriguez went deep against Detroit’s Justin Verlander, for making disparaging remarks about him after he came away with the ball.

General partner Hal Steinbrenner teamed with president Randy Levine and COO Lonn Trost to get Hample to fork over the ball to Rodriguez, a notion that would have sounded laughable even two months ago.

And in an awkward press conference before Friday’s game, Hample removed Rodriguez’s milestone ball from a ziplock bag and presented it to Rodriguez.

“It’s been quite a year,” Rodriguez said. “Never 12 months ago did I think I’d be in a position with 660 [homers] and 3,000 [hits] with two swings of the bat to be able to influence so many kids in need. … I feel very fortunate to be where we are today.”

Friday’s development did have some benefit to the Yankees.

The $3.5 million donation will not be subject to the luxury tax. Had the Yankees been forced to pay the full $6 million as a bonus to Rodriguez, it would have cost them $9 million, factoring in the tax.

Still, it’s a far cry from where the tone that existed after Rodriguez hit the Mays-tying homer at Fenway Park on May 1, when Yankees general manager Brian Cashman made it clear the team did not intend to pay the bonus.

But there has been a softening between the two sides of late, including the team’s effort to secure the ball from Rodriguez’s 3,000th career hit.

“I’m especially happy to have the ball back to share with my girls,” Rodriguez said of his daughters. “That’s going to be pretty awesome.”

No doubt Rodriguez’s continued solid play has made this apparent détente.

“I’ve always said if he came back and was productive, I thought things would go well,” manager Joe Girardi said. “And that’s what he’s done. I think that’s why you see things going the way they’re going.”