New Yorkers overwhelmingly oppose the recently announced requirement that motorists must turn in license plates that are more than 10 years old and replace them with new ones, according to a Siena College poll released Tuesday.

State residents oppose the measure 60-31 percent. A larger majority, 75-23 percent, think the $25 license replacement fee is unfair.

“New Yorkers of every stripe – regardless of party, region, gender, race, or age – oppose the new requirement to surrender license plates that are at least a decade old for newly designed state license plates,” said Siena College pollster Steven Greenberg. “Opposition is smaller with Democrats, New York City voters, and black, Latino and younger voters, however, a majority or plurality of each of those groups oppose this new requirement on motorists.”

Greenberg added that at least two-thirds of voters from every party, region, gender, race, or age group say the $25 license replacement fee is unfair.

 “Surprisingly, 40 percent of New Yorkers say they were aware of the late summer online poll to select the new license plate design, and 10 percent say they voted online to choose the new design,” Greenberg said.

The design, featuring Niagara Falls, the Adirondack Mountain range and the New York City skyline, was the one picked by those who took part in the poll out of a field of five choices.

Gov. Andrew Cuomo, who has taken flack from lawmakers about the fee, and who has also criticized their reactions and media coverage of the controversy, has a 48-46 percent favorability rating according to the poll, up from negative 43-50 percent in August. His job performance rating is 38-59 percent, up from 34-64 percent last month.

The new plates will be available in April.