Former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie is leaving his constituents with a big, fat bill for his official portrait — one that will cost a stunning $85,000.

The larger-than-life price tag is $10,500 higher than what Christie’s last three predecessors paid for their portraits combined, NorthJersey.com reported Thursday.

The two-term Republican will be forever commemorated as New Jersey’s 55th governor in an oil-on-canvas portrait by award-winning Australian artist Paul Newton.

Newton’s list of famous subjects includes pop star Kylie Minogue, former NBA Commissioner David Stern and the Duke of Edinburgh, according to his website.

Christie, 55, sat for Newton Dec. 27 and 28 and his three-quarter-size portrait is estimated to be completed by this fall at the latest, according to the contract obtained by NorthJersey.com.

In 2010, with just 11 months in office, Christie made it clear that he looked forward to one day being immortalized as governor.

“I’m getting the oil portrait in the Statehouse,” he said at the time. “So here’s the thing. When I bring my grandchildren back to the Statehouse and I show them that painting … they’re going to ask me, ‘What did you do, Grandpa, what did you do?'”

His pricey portrait is costlier than those of former Democrat Govs. Jon Corzine, Richard Codey and Jim McGreevey — who paid a combined $74,500.

It’s also the highest-priced portrait since Democrat Jim Florio, who paid $58,000 for his.

Christie’s likeness will be paid for through a taxpayer-funded account of $250,000 used by governors to pay for office space, staff and other services like paintings, according to NorthJersey.com.

Documents showed he’s already paid $37,500 toward the portrait and owes another $47,500.

It’s unclear where Christie’s mug will hang. The Statehouse, where portraits of former governors used to line the walls, is under multi-year renovations that he ordered.

After the governor’s office moved to West State Street, some of the most recent gubernatorial portraits were hung in a media center where press conferences are held.

Christie hasn’t been shy about his taste for the finer things in life.

The at-times gruff governor enjoyed flights on a private jet lent to him by billionaire casino magnate Sheldon Adelson, hung with U2 singer Bono at parties and watched Dallas Cowboys games from owner Jerry Jones’ private box.

“I try to squeeze all the juice out of the orange that I can,” he told the New York Times in 2014.

As New Jersey US attorney, he was one of five federal prosecutors who “exhibited noteworthy patterns of improperly exceeding the government rate” for hotels, according to a 2010 US Department of Justice report.

That included a $475-a-night stay at the Four Seasons Hotel in Washington, DC — more than double the government rate of $233 per night.

He justified the stay at the five-star hotel by saying he had an early morning speech scheduled there the next day.