New Yorkers overwhelmingly oppose the Cuomo administration plan requiring that motorists turn in their license plates that are more than 10 years old and replace them with new ones for a $25 fee, a poll released Tuesday found.

By a 60 percent to 31 percent margin, voters are against requiring drivers to replace the plates, according to the Siena College survey.

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

Meanwhile, 10 percent of New Yorkers say they voted in the recent online poll to select a new license plate design, and another third say they were aware of the poll but didn’t vote. The winning design features a panorama of New York landscapes, including the Manhattan skyline, Montauk’s famous lighthouse, Niagara Falls and the Statue of Liberty.

“New Yorkers of every stripe — regardless of party, region, gender, race, or age — oppose the new requirement to surrender license plates that are at least a decade old for newly designed state license plates,” said Siena pollster Steven Greenberg.

“When it comes to the $25 license replacement fee, New Yorkers are even more united in their opposition. At least two-thirds of voters from every party, region, gender, race, or age group say the $25 license replacement fee is unfair. Bottom line message from voters to state: NO2PL8FEE,” Greenberg said.

Amid an intense public backlash, the Cuomo administration last month softened its stance on requiring motorists to cough up $25 to replace old license plates — and pay $20 more to keep the same plate number — saying they were willing to negotiate changes with the Legislature.

The license plate program mandates that all drivers with plates at least 10 years old swap them for new ones costing $25 starting April 1, 2020.

Former Gov. David Paterson and the Legislature granted the DMV authority to charge a fee “not to exceed $25” a decade ago.

Cuomo senior adviser Richard Azzopardi responded, “As the DMV commissioner said weeks ago, this proposal isn’t going forward as we have committed to working with the legislature to create a plan that ensures plates are readable by law enforcement and cashless tolling systems and creates a process where plates older than 10 years are inspected and, if still readable, can be kept. Why Siena would spend its time polling outdated information is beyond me.”

In other matters, 63 percent of voters support having one consolidated primary in April 2020 covering the presidential, congressional and state legislative races. Under current law, the presidential primary will be held on April 28 and the congressional and legislative primaries will be held on June 23.

But Gov. Andrew Cuomo wants all the primaries to be held on April 28 and urged the Legislature to pass a new law early next year to consolidate them. Lawmakers are resisting moving up their legislative primaries to April.

In 2016, New York had three primary days — presidential in April, congressional in June, and state and local primaries in September — which government watchdogs complained was a waste of money.

“Governor Cuomo — who has proposed consolidating New York’s two 2020 primary days into one April primary for all offices — has found an issue that has broad bipartisan support. At least 60 percent of Democrats, Republicans, independents, upstaters, and downstaters support holding one primary in April for all offices, rather than the presidential primary in April and other primaries in June,” Greenberg said.

Elsewhere, voters say opioid addiction is a big problem. In the state, 64 percent of respondents said the opioid crisis has worsened, compared to 4 percent who say it’s improved and 23 percent who say it’s stayed about the same. In their community, 43 percent of voters said the problem has gotten worse, 7 percent improved and 38 percent the same.