Getting a pay cut from her alleged “low-show” job was a no-go for the wife of a former top aide to Gov. Cuomo, according to testimony at her husband’s corruption trial Tuesday.

Lisa Percoco turned down a big salary cut before getting laid off from her $90,000-a-year position with the Competitive Power Ventures energy company, her then-supervisor told jurors.

Percoco was offered a “per diem” rate of between $300 and $350 that would have slashed her annual income to just $7,000, former CPV spokeswoman Yanina Daigle testified in Manhattan federal court.

Although Daigle said Percoco got the boot due to budget constraints, she also recalled repeatedly complaining about her “work ethic” to then-CPV exec Peter Galbraith “Braith” Kelly, who’s accused of hiring Percoco as part of a “pay-to-play” scheme with her hubby, Joseph Percoco.

Lisa was replaced with a worker who got paid half as much, Daigle said.

Also Tuesday, prosecutors asked permission to have an FBI agent testify about an episode of “The Sopranos” in which gangsters referred to cash as “ziti” — a term Percoco allegedly adopted while discussing illegal payoffs.

Judge Valerie Caproni, who earlier refused to let jurors watch video from the HBO mob drama, didn’t immediately rule on the request.