Cardi B slammed Miami strippers who said they were ripped off during a cash-fueled post-Super Bowl bash — saying they simply weren’t entertaining enough to earn better tips.

The Bronx-born rapper — who was at the Million Dollar Bowl pole dance party Monday night — said the lazy strippers didn’t rake in more money because they failed to “shake their asses.”

“Y’all weren’t entertaining!” Cardi B, who was at the event, said in an Instagram post Wednesday. “You got to shake your ass. … Y’all was standing there like [it was] a concert. That’s not how it works ‘cuz you bitches ain’t that cute.”

A million dollars was supposed to be tossed onto the floor and stages at the event, which was put on by Cardi B’s Atlanta-based record label Quality Control at the concert venue Dome, one of the dancers told Barstool.com.

Wild photos emerged showing strippers wading through ankle-deep piles of cash, but some dancers later complained that they didn’t actually get to keep much of the dough used to make it rain. Instead, they each left with $1,100 for the night of work, the dancer said.

But Cardi B — a former stripper herself who recently gave a show-stealing performance in the flick “Hustlers” — said strippers were “stiffed” due to their lack of dance skills.

“People throw money when they hear a song they really like or when a stripper is entertaining. The only way I’m gonna throw money is if I see a stripper shaking her ass,” she said in the Instagram post.

“I felt like I was obligated to throw money … It felt like at one point n—as didn’t want to throw money because y’all weren’t entertaining,” she added.

Dancers’ apathetic attitudes didn’t help, she said.

“Since the money had to be split … I felt like that’s not fair that the bitches that was working their ass off had to split money with y’all f–kin’ stank-ass bitches that were just standing there like, ‘I don’t care.’”

Pierre “Pee” Thomas, who co-owns the Quality Control record label, released a statement saying the company wasn’t responsible for divvying up the dough.

“We don’t control or make the rules of how many girls dance, who split or payout,” or “how much money [gets] stolen,” he said in his Instagram story Tuesday.

Thomas didn’t immediately return The Post’s request for comment Thursday.

A venue operator at Dome also didn’t immediately return a request for comment.