North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has agreed to meet President Trump for a landmark summit on the border separating the Koreas after some prodding by the South Korean president, according to a report Tuesday.

President Moon Jae-in met with Kim in the Demilitarized Zone in an event that was aired around the world last Friday, when the two leaders agreed to formally end the 68-year-old Korean War and to work toward the “complete denuclearization” of the peninsula.

There’s a “strong possibility” the meeting will be held at the venue in Panmunjom, and some events could even be scheduled on the northern side of the border, CNN reported, citing a source with knowledge of North Korea’s plans.

The site has a number of advantages — including logistics for Kim and because media facilities and equipment are already in place there, the report said.

A spokesperson for Moon backed the proposal.

“(We) think Panmunjom is quite meaningful as a place to erode the divide and establish a new milestone for peace,” the spokesperson said. “Wouldn’t Panmunjom be the most symbolic place?”

Trump saw the images of the meeting between Kim and Moon and liked how it was televised, CNN reported.

He raised the possibility of having a sit-down on the border in a Sunday phone call with Moon.

“I think it’s probably going to be announced over the next couple of days,” Trump said Tuesday.

“I want to get peace. The main thing, we want to get peace. It was a big problem, and I think it’s going to work out.”

The president earlier said the border venue has a lot going for it.

“There’s something I like about it, because you’re there, if things work out, there’s a great celebration to be had on the site, not in a third-party country,” Trump said during a news conference in the White House’s Rose Garden on Monday.

There has been some push-back by members of the administration who fear Trump’s meeting with Kim on the border would make the president look too conciliatory.

They have been lobbying for a neutral location like Singapore.

Trump tried to visit the DMZ when he was in Asia in November, but the trip was scuttled because of heavy fog.

Reports from inside North Korea said the public is aware of the ongoing talks with Seoul about the possibility of a historic deal that would end hostilities. A resident of South Hamgyong Province told the Daily NK news Web site: “Right now you can just stop anywhere and hear talk of unification all around you.”