FBI agents posing as Tallahassee property developers reportedly paid for Florida gubernatorial hopeful Andrew Gillum’s tickets to see hit musical “Hamilton” on Broadway — raising new ethics questions just two weeks before the Nov. 6 election.

Gillum — who has been Tallahassee’s mayor since 2014 — got the sought-after tickets from an FBI agent using the alias “Mike Miller,” texts included in a trove of records handed to the state ethics commission show, according to the Tampa Bay Times.

“Mike Miller and the crew have tickets for us for Hamilton at 8 p.m.,” a lobbyist pal of Gillum’s named Adam Corey texted him on Aug. 10, 2016.

Gillum responded with “Awesome news about Hamilton.”

Elected officials in Florida are required by law to report the perks as gifts — but Gillum never did, according to the New York Times.

He claimed the tickets were a gift from his brother, which means they wouldn’t need to be reported. Though the texts seem to dispute this claim, Gillum continued to maintain it after the records were released, saying his brother handed the tickets to him the night of the show.

“When I got there after work, got my ticket, we went in there and saw it, assumed my brother paid for it, and so far as I know, that was the deal,” he said on Facebook Live.

The Florida Ethics Commission is looking into a complaint about trips Gillum and Corey took together and Corey’s attorney, Chris Kise, made the 150 pages of documents public Tuesday after they were subpoenaed in the investigation.

The revelation is the latest development in a long-running federal investigation into public corruption in Tallahassee, of which Corey is at the center. No one has been charged with any wrongdoing.