High-rolling Thanksgiving Day paradegoers are shelling out small fortunes for a glimpse at Gotham’s annual spectacle on Sixth Avenue, with restaurant seats going for hundreds of dollars and even a $36,000-a-night room booked out for its aerial views.

Space is already sold out at the Appel Room at Jazz at Lincoln Center — where gawkers are forking over $2,500 per person for private tables with direct views of the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade through a 50-foot wall of glass.

High-rolling Thanksgiving Day paradegoers are shelling out small fortunes for views of Gotham’s annual spectacle on Sixth Avenue. AP

Cheap seats at the glossy jazz room start at $1,000 per person – to share parade-viewing tables of up to 12 strangers.

The “premium viewing experience” will offer “state of the art audio capture and broadcast through world class sound engineering,” according to an event rep. The spectacular local comes with live music, brunch and an open bar.

The JW Marriott Essex House overlooking Central Park. StandbildCA – stock.adobe.com

The Central Park Room, of the iconic JW Marriott Essex House — another sold-out Thanksgiving parade viewing venue — is offering a “true NYC-style” experience with an early morning brunch buffet, unlimited cocktails and “indoor streaming broadcast of the parade for added comfort and visibility,” according to the website.

Other sold-out venues include restaurants, art galleries and lofts, where individual window views, patio and terrace seating go for $300 to $1,000, according to big-ticket event organizer ThanksgivingParade.com.

Quality Bistro will be showing the parade from its outdoor area on 55th Street. Quality Bistro / Facebook

Seats going for $1,000 a pop at Marea Restaurant are already completely booked, while $500 seats at Quality Meats and $300 seats at Quality Bistro are still available. At each eatery, the food is included in the price.

All three venues will be showing the parade from private outdoor terraces with the addition of boozy brunch, face painting and balloon artists at Marea.

Five-star Mandarin Oriental hotel at Columbus Circle is peddling its own suites with aerial glimpses of the parade for an average $36,000 per night on Nov. 26 and 27 – and a mandatory three-night stay.

A rep for the hotel pointed out that cheaper rooms sold out quickly in advance, thus raising the average rate over the holiday to the “top signature accommodation,” a lavish two-bedroom suite on the 50th floor.

“Our parade-facing rooms and suites sold out quickly with Suite 5000 as the final parade-view accommodation available until earlier this week, when it was booked as well,” the rep said.

Five-star Mandarin Oriental hotel at Columbus Circle is peddling suites with aerial glimpses of the parade for an average $36,000 per night. UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

But even a room at the ritzy abode overlooking the parade route is small potatoes compared to The Mark Hotel’s Thanksgiving Penthouse package – priced at a jaw-dropping $250,000, the luxe offering includes a “prime viewing table” of the parade at Columbus Circle’s Nougatine by Jean-Georges restaurant.

Aside from parade views, big spenders at The Mark will get an after-hours tour of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, private Black Friday shopping at Bergdorf Goodman, a four-course Thanksgiving feast and a holiday makeover at celebrity-favorite Frederic Fekkai Salon – all included for a stay at the hotel’s 10,000-square-foot penthouse.

Priced at a jaw-dropping $250,000, The Mark Hotel’s luxe offering includes a “prime viewing table” of the parade at Columbus Circle’s Nougatine by Jean-Georges restaurant.

Other themed perks include access to a private terrace with a cold plunge and post-Thanksgiving in-suite massages, a rep for the hotel said.

“Picture this: a grand four-course Thanksgiving feast, curated by none other than Michelin-starred Chef Jean-Georges Vongerichten, served in the privacy of the stunning penthouse dining room,” a brochure for the experience coos. “Complete with a full gourmet kitchen, this is Thanksgiving done The Mark way — with style and elegance.”

In the true spirit of giving, The Mark Hotel will be donating a “percentage” of proceeds from the extravagant spend to the City Harvest food bank.