Rockefeller Center’s Christmas tree is coming from Florida this year — the village in upstate New York, that is.

The handsome Norway spruce was chosen from numerous submissions to “bring joy to the millions who visit Rockefeller Plaza during the holiday season,” Rockefeller Center revealed on Instagram on Monday.

The tree — a tradition since 1931 — will be chopped down on Nov. 7, travel one hour from its Orange County home and take up residence in the city two days later.

After being decorated with more than 50,000 multi-colored LED lights and crowned with a Swarovski star, the transplant will be illuminated during the “Christmas in Rockefeller Center” live broadcast on Wednesday, Dec. 4.

Its pick was a particular shock for owner Carol Schultze, 79, who had not heard anything since nominating it in 2010, she told the Times Herald-Record.

Schultze had planted the spruce not long after moving into her Cedar Street home in 1958, having bought it when it was so small that she initially “kept it in our house on a card table,” she told the paper.

“It was a rootballed tree that we bought in Chester. It was only about 4 or 5 feet tall,” Schultze said.

Richard O’Donnell, who has lived with Schultze for 29 years, insisted, “I thought it was fantastic the first time I saw it, 29 years ago.”

Schultze’s cousin, Vince Poloniak, believes it is the first time the Rockefeller Center Christmas tree has been picked from the village in the more than 60 years he has lived there. “It’s a great thing for the Village of Florida,” he told the Times Herald-Record.

The selection is a yearlong process that starts with Erik Pauze, Rockefeller Center’s head gardener, driving around the tri-state area looking at candidates as well as checking those submitted by hopeful homeowners.

This tree was picked because it is “later in its life cycle,” with a younger one planted to replace it, the Rockefeller Center said.

Its lumber will be recycled in the new year for Habitat for Humanity building projects, officials said.

“The Rockefeller Center Christmas tree is a reminder to reflect, be thankful and to remember to give back to others among the hustle and bustle of the holidays. That symbol will live on as part of Habitat homeowners’ lives in their new houses,” the charity’s CEO, Jonathan Reckford, said in a statement.