She still believes in Santa Claus — despite President Trump’s nationally televised skepticism.

Seven-year-old Collman Lloyd of Lexington, South Carolina, was identified Tuesday as the child on the other end of the phone when the president asked an eyebrow-raising question about Father Christmas on Monday, the Post & Courier of Charleston reported.

Collman, like thousands of other American kids on Christmas Eve, called the North American Aerospace Defense Command, which has tracked Santa’s whereabouts for 63 years.

A scientist answered and asked her if she would like to speak with the president.

A nervous Collman sat in her kitchen on hold for about six minutes, with brisket and Brussels sprouts on the stove, before Trump picked up.

“He has a lot to do on the night of Christmas Eve,” she told the paper.

Then Trump, who was in the Oval Office in Washington, DC, with the first lady, was suddenly on speaker phone in the family’s kitchen.

“Are you still a believer in Santa?” he asked.

“Yes, sir,” she said.

Then the president asked his puzzling question:

“Because at 7, that’s marginal, right?”

“Yes, sir,” replied Collman — explaining later that she didn’t know what the word “marginal” meant.

Trump’s comment would spark national news stories about the oddball question to a child, and whether he spilled the beans to a 7-year-old, who was initially identified as a boy name “Coleman.”

“I was like, ‘Wow.’ I was shocked,” she said. “I just had to think of what the truth was.”

That night, Collman and her siblings left iced sugar cookies and chocolate milk out for Santa, and the next morning, the goodies were gone. Under the tree was a wrapped gift with Collman’s name on it: a brand new American Girl doll.

Santa, Collman concluded, is real after all.