Rachel Dolezal has a lot in common with Caitlyn Jenner — or so she thinks.

While discussing her new memoir, “In Full Color: Finding My Place in a Black and White World,” the former NAACP leader said she believed there was “some similarity” between her and the transgender Olympic legend.

“Well, I think a lot of people have drawn that parallel,” Dolezal told CNN anchor Michael Smerconish on Saturday, after he told her he thought they had a lot in common.

“And I want to be careful because certainly every category of our identity is, you know, with its own unique circumstances and challenges,” the 39-year-old said. “But for sure, there is some similarity in terms of harmonizing the outer appearance with the inner feeling, in terms of stigmatized identities. Some people will forever see me as my birth category and nothing further. And the same with Caitlyn.”

Dolezal — who was infamously ousted as a white woman in 2015, after posing as a black NAACP branch president for years — was blasted on social media last week after she made similar comments during an interview with the BBC.

“Actually, race has been, to some extent, less biological than gender,” she said. “We’ve evolved into understanding that gender is not binary, it’s not even biological. But what strikes me as so odd is that race isn’t biological, either…I believe that the word transracial has become socially useful in describing racial fluidity and identity.”

In 2015, after being asked if she was “African-American,” Dolezal infamously said she “didn’t understand the question.”

When asked by Smerconish on Saturday what she would say today if someone asked her the same question, she said her answer would be different.

“If I would have had time to really, you know, discuss my identity, I probably would have described a more complex label, pan-African, pro-black, bisexual, mother, artist, activist, but I think the question, Are you African-American? — I haven’t identified as African-American. I’ve identified as black. And black is a culture, a philosophy, a political and social view,” she said.