She ate herself out of house and home.

Accused serial dine-and-dash diva Pei Chung has been evicted from her posh Williamsburg pad, The Post exclusively learned.

City marshal Robert Renzulli spent an hour Tuesday changing the locks on Chung’s $3,500-a-month apartment inside 416 Kent Ave. after the Prada-clad wannabe influencer was booted by landlord and former New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer.

Pei Chung is in jail after she was arrested for running out on her bill at a NYC restaurant. lu.pychung/instagram

“The apartment was vacant. The young lady was not there. The eviction is completed,” Renzulli said.

The attention-hungry, cash-starved Chung shot to infamy after she was arrested at least 10 times for shirking payment on elaborate gourmet meals she ordered at a slew of swanky eateries.

Brooklyn dine-and-dasher’s apartment in Brooklyn. J.C. Rice

Fed-up restaurant workers claimed Chung — bedecked in designer duds — posed as a food influencer as she racked up huge tabs she had no intention of paying and then posted about the mouth-watering meals on Instagram as if she was hired to do so.

She even offered sex in lieu of paying for her steak at Peter Luger, a worker at the famed steakhouse said.

Fedral Marshal, Robert Renzulli, who changed the locks on the apartment of Brooklyn dine-and-dasher Pei-Yun Chung. J.C. Rice

Chung’s alleged eat-and-flee spree ended as a judge set her bail at $4,500, sending her to Rikers Island – not exactly a culinary hotspot. She was also ordered to undergo a psych evaluation.

Her stingy ways also allegedly extended to her rent.

Court papers state Chung owed a whopping $40,000 on her studio apartment, from which she posted pics of herself in skimpy lingerie.

Pei Chung got into hot water for dashing out on her bill at a number of high-end NYC restaurants. lu.pychung/Instagram

Renzulli said her possessions – furniture, clothing, bedding and more – were still in the pad. He said the landlord has to hold the items for 30 days before they’re tossed.“The general rule is that the landlord can dispose of the belongings, but in this case, I’m sure they’ll be speaking to their attorneys before they do anything like that,” he said.

— Additional reporting by Kathianne Boniello