Two victims of the California dive-boat fire were a married couple from Connecticut who were “soulmates,” according to a new report.

Kaustubh Nirmal and Sanjeeri Deopujari, of Stamford, were among the 34 people who died Monday aboard the 75-foot vessel, called the Conception, during a three-day diving excursion.

The couple, who married in 2016, were identified Thursday by the Los Angeles Times.

Deopujari, 31, was a dentist in Norwalk while her husband, Nirmal, 44, worked as a senior adviser at Ernst & Young.

The two were made for each other, Nirmal’s cousin, Rajul Sharma, told the LA Times in an e-mail.

“He found a soulmate in Sanjeeri,” Sharma said. “Their love for each other was apparent even without them speaking about it.”

He said his late cousin was sweet, sensitive and an animal lover.

“God took them away from us untimely and unfairly, but even he didn’t have the heart to separate them in death,” Sharma said.

Neighbors at the couple’s Forest Street apartment building remembered how they’d walk their Chow Chow dog, Bebe, together.

“They were very nice, kind. So we’re in shock,” Beatrice Curran, 57, told The Post. “Our hearts go out to them. It’s incredibly sad.”

More than half of the victims have been positively identified — a process hampered by how badly burned some were.

Thirty-three passengers and one crew member were sleeping below deck when the Conception burst into flames early Monday morning, trapping them inside. Five crew members were able to escape.

Divers are searching for the one body that still has not been found.

With Wire Services