These tiny dancers are getting big perks.

Russia is building a $30 million center for acrobatic rock’n’roll — an offbeat “sport” in which President Vladimir Putin’s daughter competes, state documents show.

Putin’s youngest daughter, Katerina Tikhonova, 30, and her dance partner Dmitry Alekseev are ranked the 11th-best rock’n’­rollers in the world and sixth-best in Russia, Reuters reported.

Tikhonova is also a vice president at the World Rock’n’Roll Center, a senior official in the sport’s national federation, and chairs its committee for Russian regional development.

The bizarre activity involves couples dancing to rock hits while mixing in acrobatic flips and stunts.

The 1-acre complex is being built for the Moscow City Khamovniki state sports and dance school — where Tikhonova studied — and will be the only specialized facility in the world dedicated to the niche sport, according to the World Rock’n’Roll Confederation (WRRC).

The facility will be built on the western outskirts of Moscow and will include a gymnasium, a trampoline hall, a 27-yard pool and a competition area with seating for 2,000 people.

There will also be living space for 300 people, a conference hall, a lecture theater, a helicopter landing pad.

“Rock’n’Roll” will be stamped on the side of the building.

The complex will be funded by the Russian government.

A Kremlin spokesman said Tikhonova’s passion for the sport has nothing to do with building the facility, but critics say otherwise.

“Moscow is just building this place to satisfy the personal ambitions of the president’s daughter,” said opposition politician and anti-corruption campaigner Lubov Sobol.

Tikhonova, the Moscow city sports department and the Russian Federation of Acrobatic Rock’n’Roll did not respond to repeated requests for comment about Tikhonova’s role in the project or its expense.

Only about 9,000 Russians actively participate in the wacky sport compared to more than 22,000 people who compete in archery, according to the national federation.

But the state is only spending about $337,000 on the latter — about 89 times less than the Rock’n’Roll center.

“I don’t see any reason why to do it. Especially not in Russia,” said the general secretary of the WRRC, Kresimir Bosnar.

“Rock’n’roll acrobatic is a quite specific sport. It is an individual sport based on couples. It is not a mass sport. So you cannot expect that you will have millions of people dancing acrobatic rock’n’roll in the future,” Bosnar added.