WELL-OILED athletes are poised for lots of action in the upcoming Rio Summer Games — much of it between the sheets.

The first Olympic record to be broken in Brazil is the number of condoms being dished out: 450,000, as well as 175,000 packets of lubricant.

Men will receive 350,000 of the prophylactics and, for the first time, women will be provided 100,000 female condoms from the International Olympic Committee.

The latex loot of camisinhas — Brazilian slang for “little shirts” — at the Olympic Village will give a whole new meaning the famous motto of “faster, higher, stronger.”

The 10,500 frisky athletes will each pack a whopping 42 condoms — enough for two to three hormone-fuelled hookups a day for the duration of the 17-day sporting event.

That is three times the 150,000 condoms supplied by the IOC during London’s 2012 games, The Guardian reported.

The tabloids have already dubbed the Olympics, which kick off Aug, 5 amid fears of the rampant Zika virus, as “the raunchiest games ever.”

“It is an absolutely huge allocation of condoms,” Olympic rowing gold and silver medallist Zac Purchase, who competed in London and Beijing four years earlier, told the paper.

Purchase wanted to dispel the notion that the athletes are blinded by their sexual conquests rather than winning gold, silver or bronze medals.

“It’s not some sexualised cauldron of activity. We’re talking about athletes who are focused on producing the best performance of their lives,” he said.

The condom count began in Seoul in 1988, when 8,500 condoms were provided to athletes. Reports of condoms found on the roofs of Olympic housing units led the Olympic Association to ban outdoor fornication.

In 1992, 9000 condoms were distributed in Barcelona and in Atlanta 1996, the number jumped to 15,000.

Things heated up considerably in 2000, when organisers had to order 20,000 more after 70,000 condoms ran out halfway through the Sydney games.

US target shooter Josh Lakatos said: “I’d never witnessed the debauchery seen at Sydney 2000 in my entire life. My apartment in the Olympic Village was like a brothel,” Metro reported.

In Athens 2004, Durex donated 130,000 condoms “to smooth the performance of the world’s elite sports people in the arena and under the covers,” The Guardian reported.

During the 2008 Beijing Olympics, US women’s soccer goalie Hope Solo said: “There’s a lot of sex going on at the Olympics. I’ve seen people having sex out in the open, getting down and dirty on grass between buildings.”

This article originally appeared on the New York Post