Even some Trump University plaintiffs who voted for Hillary Clinton are now thrilled by the election results — thanks to Donald Trump’s Pre-President’s Day sale on legal settlements.

Eager to clear the docket before his inauguration, the president-elect has agreed to pay $25 million to be split among the 6,000 litigants who called his university a fraud.

“That’s great!” one plaintiff in The Bronx said of Friday’s news.

That’s many times more than the seven-figure total settlement that was being considered back when everyone assumed he wouldn’t get elected, a source apprised of the negotiations told The Post.

Under the settlement, Trump will not admit wrongdoing, the source said.

“Of course that’s much better!” the plaintiff, a 74-year-old, Clinton-supporting real-estate agent, said of the few extra thousand dollars she’ll now collect.

“That means more money for everybody,” said the woman, who spent $5,000 for Trump U classes five years ago, and who asked her name not be used.

Asked if she would rather get less cash if it meant Trump not be president, she added, “The settlement — I really want it, even if Hillary’s not president, poor thing.”

Other pro-Clinton plaintiffs were less enthusiastic over Trump’s “Everything must go!” fire sale on legal settlements, saying it was just the silver lining to a bad election outcome.

“I still think we would be in better shape if he wasn’t president,” said a 62-year-old IT consultant from Monroe Township, NJ, who spent $35,000 on Trump U.

The $25 million payout will make three class-action suits go away in time for Trump’s move to the White House, according to New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman, whose office filed one of the suits in 2013.

Of that total, $1 million will go to the state of New York as a penalty for violations of state education laws, officials said.

Each victim will get restitution, the AG said.

“Donald Trump fought us every step of the way, filing baseless charges and fruitless appeals and refusing to settle for even modest amounts of compensation for the victims of his phony university,” Schneiderman said.

The other plaintiffs sued as part of two California-based class actions, one of which had been due to go to trial in 10 days, in the midst of Trump’s transition to Washington.

That case was before Gonzalo Curiel of San Diego, the Indiana-born judge who then-candidate-Trump claimed could not be fair because he was “Mexican.”

A Trump spokesperson responded Friday night: “We are pleased to announce the complete resolution of all litigation involving Trump University. While we have no doubt that Trump University would have prevailed at trial based on the merits of this case, resolution of these matters allows President-Elect Trump to devote his full attention to the important issues facing our great nation.”

Additional reporting by Daniel Halper