A driver who mowed down a 3-year-old girl in a Queens crosswalk two years ago has agreed to stay off the roads for five years — and give 75 percent of his net worth to the victim’s family.

If Ahmad Abu-Zayedeh breaks his promise and gets caught applying for a license or driving anytime before late 2020, he will have to fork over an additional $100,000 to the the family of Allison Liao, according to the terms of his lawsuit settlement.

Allison and her grandmother were crossing a Flushing street hand in hand when Zayedeh, 45, struck them with his SUV, killing the little girl.

The five-year, no license penalty is 60 times the slap on the wrist issued by the DMV, which took Abu-Zayedeh’s license for just one month in 2013. The family’s attorney, Steve Vaccaro, said the amends Zayedeh will make are in line with what drivers who cause deaths make in other parts of the world.

“These kinds of penalties are never applied in the United States as long as the driver was sober, so we were able to use civil litigation to get a semblance of the kind of justice they get around the world,” said Vaccaro. “We hope that it will start a trend.”

Vaccaro declined to say what the man’s net worth is, but he said the Liao family now has a lien on Zayedeh’s Williamsburg condo and can foreclose on his home if he does not comply with any of the settlement terms.

In an apology letter to the family, Zayedeh took full responsibility for the little girl’s death.

“I was not looking where I should have been when I turned my car, and that is the sole reason why she is dead,” he wrote. “I have watched the video recording of the incident and I now understand that I am entirely at fault for Allison’s death, and that she and her grandmother Chin Hua were blameless.”