Yahoo Chief Executive Marissa Mayer may not have been able to save the company she joined nearly five years ago — but she certainly saved her bank account.

Mayer will receive $186 million for the stock, stock options and restricted stock units she holds if shareholders on June 8 vote to approve the $4.48 billion sale of Yahoo’s core search and email service to Verizon, according to a report.

The eye-popping sum was revealed less than two months after Yahoo’s board decided not to award Mayer any 2016 bonus in the wake of Yahoo’s epic data breach, in which the board said “certain senior executives did not properly comprehend or investigate” the hacks.

In a March Tumblr post, Mayer said she had “expressed my desire that my bonus be redistributed to our company’s hardworking employees, who contributed so much to Yahoo’s success in 2016.”

Mayer in March also gave up any equity award for 2017, whose value Recode had estimated at $14 million. At the time, Mayer’s payout after the Verizon sale is complete was pegged at $55 million by the company.

Now, it’s unclear whether Mayer plans to share any of the much-bigger golden parachute it turns out she’s getting, details of which were included in a regulatory filing Monday.

The whopper of a payday does not include her salary, bonuses and stock awarded over the past five years, or the stock she’s already sold.

With her sizable checks included, Mayer, who joined the ailing search giant in 2012 from Google, will have pocketed more than $200 million from the Sunnyvale, Calif., company, according to the New York Times, which first reported on the filing.

Her $186 million in Yahoo stock, stock options and restricted stock units are based on Monday’s stock price of $48.15, according to data filed Monday in the documents sent to shareholders about the Verizon deal.