If you’re dreaming of a white Christmas, you just might get it.

There’s more than a quarter of a chance New Yorkers could wake up to snow on Christmas morning, according to the National Weather Service’s latest forecast.

Forecasts for Christmas Eve show sunny skies with a high of 43 degrees.

But rain is forecast to begin Sunday night before 10 p.m. It changes to a mix of rain and snow between midnight and 3 a.m. with a possible turn to all snow as temperatures dip into the mid- or low 30s.

A snow accumulation of up to three inches is possible, according to forecasters.

On Monday — Christmas morning — there will be a 30 percent chance of snow before 9 a.m. in the Big Apple, according to the National Weather Service.

Sunny skies are expected for the rest of Christmas Day, with a projected high temperature of 39 degrees. By nightfall, some clouds are anticipated to roll in, with a low temperature of 26 degrees.

“There’s going to be snow — it’s just a matter of whether it accumulates or not,” AccuWeather meteorologist Tom Kines told The Post Friday.

“My hunch is probably not,” Kines said. “The odds are it’s not going to [accumulate]. The ground is just not cold enough.”

Saturday, the temperature is expected to warm up amid precipitation, with nearly a 100 percent chance of rain, the National Weather Service predicts.

Saturday’s high is expected to come close to 50 degrees. Predicted rainfall is between one-half and three quarters of an inch.

It has been rare for the Big Apple to see snow on Christmas. The city’s historical probability of snowfall on the Yule holiday is 11 percent, according to CNN.