Honk if you hate taxes!

Drivers who cross into Manhattan below 61st Street will be socked with the nation’s first congestion-pricing fees under the budget deal that was awaiting approval Sunday night.

Plans call for a six-member commission to decide how much motorists will get soaked for the privilege of sitting in Midtown traffic, with electronic readers automatically assessing the tolls.

Previous proposals have called for fees between $11 and $12 each for cars and $25 for trucks, and they could come in addition to other tolls for crossing New York City’s bridges and tunnels.

One study has said that might mean a total $133 each for 18-wheelers hauling food and other consumer goods.

Although it’s been adopted in other cities, including London, Stockholm and Singapore, congestion pricing got the cold shoulder from state lawmakers when New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg proposed it more than a decade ago.

But as Manhattan’s streets grew increasingly clogged in recent years with Uber and Lyft drivers waiting for app-based hails, Gov. Cuomo warmed to the idea as a way to raise money for the crumbling subway system.

It’s expected to raise around $1 billion in revenues, which will be put into a “lockbox” for mass-transit upgrades.

The AAA Northeast motorist-advocacy group said it was “very disappointed that there are no funds devoted to road repair.”