Note to America’s workers: It doesn’t get much better than this.

The US economy added a greater than expected 250,000 jobs, the Labor Department said Friday, while US wages grew at their fastest clip since the Great Recession, surging 3.1 percent last month.

Rising US wages marked their strongest monthly gain since 2009. The unemployment level, meanwhile, held at 3.7 percent — its lowest level since 1969. Job growth was felt across the board, with health care, manufacturing, construction and professional services seeing the biggest gains, Labor said.

“It is encouraging to see that Americans are seeing more in their paychecks as job creators compete for the best talent in the workforce,” Labor Secretary Alexander Acosta said in a statement Friday.

US markets weren’t sure what to make of Friday’s employment figures as stocks were whipsawed by conflicting reports of Trump’s trade talks with Chinese President Xi Jinping and an overheating economy.

The Dow Jones industrial average fell 109.91 points — or 0.4 percent — Friday to settle at 25,270.83 points. The blue-chip index was able to come back from its intraday drop of 302 points. Other stock indexes were also down, with the broader S&P 500 shedding 0.6 percent and the tech-weighted Nasdaq off a full percent.

While higher paychecks are a boon to households, Wall Street analysts noted that positive jobs data will also give the Federal Reserve the ammunition it needs to continue raising interest rates — a move that could slow the economy.

“Three percent is an important milestone. It suggests the job market is strong and lights a fire for the Fed to stay on path,” Jack Ablin of Cresset Wealth Advisors said.

The Fed hinted at one more rate hike this year at the conclusion of its December meeting as it tries to prevent the healthy economy from overheating.

“We’re not at the point where Main Street and Wall Street are at odds with each other,” Quincy Krosby, chief market strategist at Prudential, told The Post, adding that 3.5 percent wage growth would be the next milestone.

Trouble comes if wages “move more rapidly than the market expects,” Krosby said.

Nevertheless, rate hikes have attracted scorn from President Trump, who argued in an interview with The Wall Street Journal last month that boosts in borrowing costs temper the “hot economy” he’s overseen.

But keeping rates too low for too long will leave the Fed without a “spare tire” if economic conditions were to worsen, even though the hikes themselves may cause short-term headwinds for growth and risk-taking, Ablin said.

“Rates are too low for current economic conditions. It’s time to put on our big boy pants,” Ablin added.

Trump was quick to celebrate the October jobs data and used the positive figures to urge voters to support Republican candidates in Tuesday’s midterm elections.

“These are incredible numbers. Keep it going, Vote Republican!” Trump tweeted early Friday.