Despite a raft of sexual misconduct allegations and limited campaign appearances, Republican Roy Moore has regained a lead in a Senate race in Alabama, according to a poll out Tuesday.

Moore has reopened a 5-point lead over Doug Jones — 49 percent to 44 percent — wiping out a 3-point lead his Democratic challenger held in Change Research’s first poll taken after the claims surfaced on Nov. 9.

His resurgence is propelled by President Trump voters.

Eighty-eight percent of those surveyed who voted for Trump in 2016 said they will “definitely” vote for Moore on Dec. 12, a 6 percentage-point increase since mid-November, the poll shows.

Trump voters also showed a dramatic change in whether they believe the sexual allegations.

In mid-November, 16 percent of them believed the claims and 51 percent rejected them.

In Tuesday’s poll, only 9 percent believe them and 63 don’t.

Although the White House has said Trump will not stump for Moore in Alabama, the president has expressed his support for the embattled Senate candidate and trashed the Democratic opponent as being “weak on crime, weak on the border … and wants to raise taxes to the sky.”

“He denies it. He totally denies it. That’s all I can say,” Trump told reporters about Moore last week.

Nine women have come forward to accuse Moore of sexually harassing, molesting or assaulting them in the 1970s — with one woman claiming he groped her when she was 14 and he was 32.

Moore, 70, hit the campaign trail for the first time in two weeks Monday evening and called the allegations “completely false,” likening them to the claims that Trump colluded with the Russians during the 2016 presidential election.

Moore and Jones are running in a special election to fill the Senate seat vacated by Jeff Sessions after he was named US attorney general.

The survey of 1,868 registered Alabama voters was conducted online between Nov. 26 and 27.