President Trump’s job approval rating hit a new low in November, according to a new poll.

Only 41 percent of registered voters surveyed approve of the job the commander-in-chief is doing, while 59 percent of those surveyed disapprove, the Harvard-Harris survey shows, The Hill reported Friday.

That’s one point down from October — which was the previous low — and four points down from September, when Trump’s job approval rating briefly spiked to 45 percent.

In March, Trump hit a 49 percent peak approval rating in the Harvard-Harris Poll.

The Harvard-Harris survey, a monthly poll released by Harvard’s Center for American Political Studies and Harris Insights and Analytics, also found while his job approval rating is down overall, 79 percent of Republicans and 86 percent of Trump voters approve of the job he is doing, the report says.

However, the president is only viewed favorably by 38 percent of voters.

This week, Trump returned home after a 12-day trip across Asia, which he touted on Twitter as “successful.”

“Despite a strong trip, President Trump’s ratings remain at a low point for his presidency,” Harvard CAPS/Harris co-director Mark Penn told the site.

“He is holding his base but the fratricide in the Republican Party puts a ceiling on his support — the Republican Party itself has much lower ratings than Trump as it has failed to produce for the voters,” Penn said.

According to the survey, the GOP’s job approval rating is at 28 percent with just 52 percent of Republicans approving of the political party.

The House on Thursday passed a sweeping Republican tax bill that would cut tax rates for businesses and individuals.

Fifty-four percent of voters, according to the poll, say they oppose the tax reform bill.

Seventy-seven percent of Democrats and 56 percent of independents believe the tax bill will hurt them, according to the survey.

“There is enormous support for tax reform in the country and the Republicans are close to getting majority support for their bill but are falling short as Democrats have so far successfully challenged whether most people are actually getting a tax cut,” Penn told The Hill.

“Most people think they are not getting a tax cut and Republicans need to fix that to unlock support.”