President Trump on Wednesday admitted in a financial- disclosure filing what everyone already knew — that he “fully reimbursed” lawyer Michael Cohen, who paid $130,000 in hush money to porn star Stormy Daniels.

Federal officials, however, suggested the president made the disclosure a year later than he should have.

“In the interest of transparency,” Trump’s annual financial report says, the president acknowledged in 2017 that he paid Cohen between $100,001 and $250,000 after his fixer made a deal in 2016 with Daniels to keep quiet about her alleged affair years earlier with Trump.

The formal disclosure set off a new round of potential legal problems for the president.

The Office of Government Ethics said Trump should have reported Cohen’s payoff to the stripper as a “liability” on his 2017 forms since the president was indebted to his lawyer in 2016, which Trump’s lawyers dispute.

David Apol, the acting director of the ethics office, sent a letter to Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein stating that the Cohen payment constitutes a debt, which may be relevant to “any inquiry” Rosenstein may be pursuing about Trump’s 2017 financial statements.

“This is tantamount to a criminal referral,” former ethics director Walter Shaub tweeted. “OGE has effectively reported the president to DOJ for potentially committing a crime.”

The filing also revealed that Cohen “sought reimbursement,” but the lawyer earlier claimed he doled out the money by taking a home equity loan to protect his client.

The 92-page financial disclosure form also reveals Trump made at least $511 million last year, according to Bloomberg News.

Trump cited income from his vast real estate empire, but also $9 million from New York City ice skating rinks and $201 to $1,000 in royalty payments from his previous appearances on “Fresh Prince of Bel-Air” and the 1994 movie the “Little Rascals.”

The president also reported pension payments from the Screen Actors Guild and the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists.

First Lady Melania Trump, an ex-model, made up to $1 million from Getty Images for use of her photos.

Trump didn’t make a windfall on his golf courses after entering the White House.

Figures for 15 of Trump’s 17 golf courses — Dubai numbers were excluded — show the golf properties brought in $221.9 million last year, according to Market Watch. Trump reported they pulled in $287.8 million in 2016.

Trump’s Washington hotel — just blocks from the White House and a rest stop for elites seeking favor with the administration — brought in $40.4 million. It made $19.7 million the previous year, when the hotel was open just seven months.

The report also shows that Trump accepted gifts from only two individuals — pro golfers Kevin Streelman, who gave him golf clubs and a bag valued at $1,150, and Bryson DeChambeau, who gave clubs valued at $750.

Trump is donating his $400,000 salary to federal agencies.