President Trump is expected to get a hearty Irish welcome Wednesday when he arrives in Doonbeg — a tiny coastal town that credits him with job creation and an economic boom.

The one-street village, population 200, has been home to Trump International Golf Links & Hotel since Trump acquired the 400-acre property five years ago.

“There are over 300 employed here because of him, what else is around here?” Joe Pender said, as he and other locals hung American flags from every lamppost in preparation for Trump’s arrival.

Trump will stay at his hotel Wednesday night following a quick meeting with Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar and in between his state visit to the UK and a trip to France.

Pender, 60, remembers feeding cattle on the fields before the links were built in 2002 — reinvigorating the region, which at one point saw its unemployment rate rocket to 16 percent.

Economic investments from Trump and others led to a boom, driving tourism to Doonbeg, which abuts the Atlantic Ocean, and causing the unemployment rate to drop to 5 percent.

“He’s the biggest employer in west Clare,” Martin Kelly told the Guardian.

The 48-year-old owner of a trucking company sees business from the golf resort.

“He has done a brilliant job,” Kelly added. “He’s keeping west Clare going. Doonbeg would be a different place if he wasn’t here.”

The warm welcome in Doonbeg will be in stark contrast to the sour reception he received some 900 miles away in London, where thousands of anti-Trump protesters flooded the streets Tuesday.

Residents acknowledge Trump’s divisiveness but said he’s come through where it matters most — at home.

“Nobody is perfect but if any place had what we had, they’d be on top of the world,” said the Rev. Joe Haugh, 87, a local priest who gets to play golf free of charge. “He’s put bread and butter on the table.”

At the local pub, owner Tommy Tubridy has been practicing his Guinness pours so the pints will come emblazoned with the letters “T-R-U-M-P” in the foam.

“He’s a man that pulls a lot of surprises so you’d never know, he could pop down,” Tubridy hoped. “He’s a non-drinker, though, so he’d probably have a glass of the local spring water and that’d be grand.”

With Post wires