It’s finally un-Occupied.

Police arrested six Occupy Wall Street members squatting inside a Brooklyn home five months after the movement seized the property amid grand promises to “renovate” it and move in “a homeless family.”

Instead, the group moved itself in, wrecked the place, and made a hard situation even worse for a single father who actually owned the East New York home and was trying to save it from foreclosure.

Cops cuffed the occupiers after they allegedly smashed a window to get into 702 Vermont St. on April 1.

Mohammed Olivo, 22, of The Bronx, was charged with resisting arrest and burglary.

Also charged with burglary were: Carlos Goodall, 18, of Valhalla, NY; Mitchell Hundt, 20, of Chicago; Sean Gregg, 18, of Philadelphia; Terrence Hubbard, 23, of Ohio; and East Village resident Decorrus Jones, 25, who has been arrested 31 times for crimes like trespass and petit larceny. “He steals a lot,” cops said of Jones.

Wise Ahadzi, the property’s owner, was thrilled that cops collared the people who were preventing him and two daughters from getting back into their home.

“I’ve been angry since Day One,” Ahadzi said. “I told them that I didn’t want anybody there.”

The bill to fix the damage is at least $12,000, a source said.

“We’re exploring the possibility of assisting him with repairs to the property,” said Bank of America spokesman T.J. Crawford.