Mayor Bill de Blasio raised $1.1 million from 6,700 donors for his quixotic presidential campaign, according to his campaign spokeswoman.

“It’s a beginning,” de Blasio said on NY1 Monday about the modest amount.

“We’ve got a lot more to do but it was enough to get started,” the mayor said.

His total is less than half the $2.3 million that fellow 2020 contender and New Yorker Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand brought in from over 65,000 donors.

The most recent poll put both de Blasio and Gillibrand at less than one percent.

The lead fundraiser in the crowded Democratic field for the second quarter, from April to June, is Pete Buttigieg. The South Bend, Indiana mayor — who represents a population of just over 100,000 people — hauled in nearly $25 million from 294,000 donors. Former Vice President Joe Biden raised $21.5 million from 256,000 people.

The bulk of de Blasio’s contributions — $630,000 — came in the four days after his Miami debate, his spokeswoman said.

Just 6,700 people donated to de Blasio’s campaign– a figure that’s equivalent to .08 percent of New York City’s 8.6 million residents.

He needs 130,000 donors to meet qualifying threshold for the September debates.

“We have a plan to reach the qualifying level,” de Blasio said on NY1 without elaborating.

Ninety-two percent of contributors gave $50 or less, his spokeswoman said. Or, the top 8 percent of donors coughed up the bulk of the funds, about $800,000.

De Blasio has spent $372,000 or 30 percent of his fundraising total, she said.

He also hired seven new campaign staffers Monday including three in South Carolina and one in Iowa.

“These hires are a direct result of the fundraising success we’ve had in just a few short weeks, and our growth is a sign of what’s to come moving forward,” said Jon Paul Lupo, the campaign’s senior advisor.