North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has the cash for lavish caviar lunches — but he isn’t putting any toward his country’s mountain of Big Apple parking tickets.

North Korea’s diplomatic mission to the United Nations owes New York City more than $156,000 from 1,300 unpaid parking tickets, making them one of the biggest scofflaws in the city, NBC 4 reported . The unpaid tickets date back to the 1990s.

A North Korean diplomat named Jong Jo told the outlet there must be an error because the city has the right to withhold parking privileges for diplomats if they have more than three unpaid tickets.

“It’s not true,” Jo said.

“It is false. Whenever we have a ticket, we pay. Because, you know, if we have three tickets the city does not allow us to renew their permission.”

The three ticket rule dates back to a 2002 memorandum of understanding between the city and the U.S. Department of State that gives the city the right to withhold a diplomatic parking decal if one the vehicles fails to pay three or more parking tickets.

However, most of the hermit kingdom’s parking fines date back to 2002, before the understanding and during a time when diplomatic vehicles from across the world regularly racked up and ignored unpaid violations with little ramifications, NBC 4 said.

Since the MOU was signed in 2002, parking fines for diplomats dramatically reduced. In the last 15 years, foreign nations have incurred just under $700,000 in parking fines, compared to millions before 2002, the Department of Finance told the outlet.

North Korea isn’t the only foreign scofflaw in the city—Syria, Iran, Russia and China owe more than $1 million in unpaid fines collectively.

Diligent New Yorkers who pay their tickets on time weren’t pleased to hear these countries were getting away without even a boot or a tow to keep them in check.

“Trump needs to do something about that since he’s complaining about everything else,” Sioban Huggins, a driver from Flatbush, told NBC 4.

The de Blasio administration said tickets before 2002 have not been forgiven and it’s time to pay up.