Donald Trump is tied with Pope Francis as the second-most admired man among Americans, a poll released Monday found.

President Obama won the annual Gallup survey, with 17 percent naming him as the living man they admire most. He was followed by The Donald and the pontiff, who each got 5 percent.

“Trump’s surprisingly strong and often controversial presidential campaign has made him a prominent news figure this year and thus top-of-mind for many Americans,” Gallup’s Jeffrey Jones said.

The survey asked Americans 18 and older to name the two men and two women living in the world today they admire most.

Hillary Clinton was named the most admired woman for the 14th consecutive year, garnering 13 percent in this year’s poll

Rounding out the men’s list were Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders (3 percent); Microsoft founder Bill Gates (2 percent); and GOP candidate Ben Carson, the Dalai Lama, former

Presidents George W. Bush and Bill Clinton and the Rev. Billy Graham, all at 1 percent.

As for the women, Clinton was followed by Malala Yousafzai, the 18-year-old Pakistani advocate for women’s education who was shot by an attacker in 2012.

TV queen Oprah Winfrey and First Lady Michelle Obama each received 4 percent of the vote.

GOP candidate Carly Fiorina, Queen Elizabeth II and German Chancellor Angela Merkel got 2 percent, while Sen. Elizabeth Warren, former vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palin, TV host Ellen

DeGeneres, ex-Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi each got 1 percent.

Overall, Clinton has been the most admired woman 20 times — more than anyone else.

Eleanor Roosevelt was named the top woman 13 times by the poll, which dates to 1948 for women. Margaret Thatcher took the top spot six times, followed by five for Jackie Kennedy, four for

Mother Teresa and three for Israel’s Golda Meier.

Dwight D. Eisenhower was named the most admired man 12 times in the poll, which began ranking men in 1946.

Obama, Ronald Reagan and Clinton are next with eight, followed by George W. Bush with seven, and George H.W. Bush, Richard Nixon and Lyndon B. Johnson at four times apiece.