A top University of Southern California official who was fired for allegedly taking bribes in the college admissions scandal is now working as a Lyft driver — and selling her $2 million mansion, according to a new report.

Donna Heinel lost her job as USC’s senior associate athletic director last month when she was busted for allegedly taking more than $1.3 million in payoffs to help at least 24 rich kids get into the college as bogus athletic recruits — including the daughters of “Full House” star Lori Loughlin.

Now she’s ferrying around passengers as a driver for ride-sharing company Lyft — and recently put her home in Long Beach on the market for $1.998 million, CBS LA reports.

She bought the four-bedroom, three-story, Mediterranean-style property in 2012 for $1.2 million, according to the LA Times.

Heinel was one of a dozen college athletic officials arrested for working with the scheme’s mastermind, William “Rick” Singer, in the nationwide scam, and has pleaded not guilty to charges of conspiracy to commit racketeering.

Federal prosecutors say parents paid her by directly sending money into USC accounts she controlled, as well as funneling cash through a sham charity run by Singer.

“In exchange for the bribe payments, Heinel helped facilitate the admission of more than two dozen students as recruited athletes, even though many of those students had fabricated athletic credentials and some did not even play the sports they were purportedly being recruited to play,” prosecutors allege in court papers.

Those students included Isabella Rose Giannulli and Olivia Jade Giannulli, the daughters of Loughlin and her fashion designer husband, Mossimo Giannulli, the feds claim.

They allege Mossimo Giannulli sent money directly to Heinel as well as to Singer’s foundation, and Heinel then enlisted the girls as crew recruits — even though neither actually competed in the sport.

When Olivia Jade’s skeptical high school counselor started asking questions of the student — because the counselor didn’t believe she participated in crew — Heinel allegedly left Singer a voicemail message expressing concern about parents “creating any type of disturbance at the school.”

“I just want to make sure those students … if questioned at the school that they respond in a[n] appropriate way that they are, walk-on candidates for their respective sports. They’re looking forward to trying out for the team and making the team when they get here. OK?” she allegedly said.

“So I just don’t want anybody going into … [the Giannullis’ daughter’s high school], you know, yelling at counselors. That’ll shut everything — that’ll shut everything down.”

Loughlin and Mossimo Giannulli filed court documents last week saying they will plead not guilty to wire fraud and money laundering conspiracy charges.