No more sex parties for you!

A randy tenant has been using his rented East Village townhouse as a den of iniquity, charging $60 to attend sex-filled shindigs featuring swings, spankings and group foreplay, according to court papers.

Avraham Adler signed a two-year lease on the four-story home at 189 East 7th St. on April 1, and within a month opened the space to “lewd, loud” parties almost every week, his landlord charges.

During at least two of the soirees, “on premises sex took place,” property owner Wonwoo Chang claims in a Manhattan Supreme Court filing.

He’s asking a judge to shut down the parties.

An event had been scheduled for Saturday night in an online ad that billed the venue as “the most luxurious playspace in the city for naughty!”

“Sex is secondary, merely the cherry atop the cake of fetish play for us and many,” the listing on Eventbrite.com boasted. “Enter a place without conformity to the mainstream.”

A Manhattan Supreme Court judge ordered Adler not to host the event. One Facebook notice claimed the party was canceled.

An investigator for Chang scoped out one of Adler’s August events and found a bouncer at the door, a bar on the rooftop and naked partygoers throughout the home, the landlord claims in his filing.

One room had a “queen-sized bed on which people who were partially clothed in underwear, were engaging in foreplay but not sexual intercourse,” investigator James Wang said in an affidavit.

On the first floor, he noted, “a naked man who sat on a swing was being spanked by two women clad in lingerie.”

Another area featured mattresses on the floor and two naked women sitting on a couch, Wang said.

Sangria was going for $8 a cup, while the marijuana cookies were $15.

Some of the bashes have been so busy, the place is packed “to the point of overcapacity,” and the music has been loud enough to shake the walls of adjoining structures, neighbors said.

Adler tells cops he owns the building, and illegally parks his car at a hydrant, despite getting regular tickets, court papers claim.

The parties have resulted in multiple complaints from neighbors about the noise, visits from cops and violations for garbage piled up outside, said Chang, who alleges that Adler’s illicit use of the property could damage Chang’s reputation and that of the building.

“Years from now, people will shun the premises and refuse to have business dealings with Chang, if Adler’s lewd, loud, controlled substance infested commercial parties are not enjoined,” the landlord claims in court papers.

Adler’s lease is for residential, not commercial, use, the landlord maintains.

“He’s supposed to live there. He signed a residential lease,” said Chang’s lawyer, Steven Katz.

On Saturday, a building neighbor fumed to The Post that “some guy has moved in here recently and I’ll wake up at 4 a.m. to what sounds like dozens of people running around, It’s out of control.

“When he’s not partying though it’s hard to find him.”

The neighbor’s partner piped in: “We’ve had problems like this before. Nothing gets done until the cops come. People in this building, we don’t like calling them.”

Adler fired off an email to The Post denying the allegations.

“Not sure what you’re trying to gain from this nonsense,” Adler wrote Saturday. “I just don’t get this whole thing no parties are going on,” the email said.