GoPro won’t be snapping selfies with a merger partner anytime soon.

The struggling action-camera maker has failed to attract the serious interest of any bidders after hiring JPMorgan last year to explore a possible sale, two sources told The Post.

Nick Woodman, GoPro’s beach-tanned founder and chief executive officer, had said in TV interviews in January that he was open to a sale and confirmed he’d hired JPMorgan, goosing the company’s shares despite its worsening financial outlook.

Nevertheless, “no one wants to touch GoPro,” a source with good knowledge of the sales process said.

A second source close to the sale said, “A lot of people have kicked the tires and Nick Woodman is a complicated guy,” adding that there is no deal close at hand.

Woodman strongly hinted about a possible sale in both January and February.

“My job as CEO is to … create as big an opportunity for our investors as possible and … if we can achieve that more easily and more quickly with a partner, we would jump at the chance to have that opportunity,” Woodman told Bloomberg on Feb. 13.

GoPro’s shares Thursday closed down 5 cents to $5.74, an $839 million market cap.

Woodman on Jan. 9 reported disappointing earnings and the company’s shares fell to $5.09. Later that day, Woodman revealed the company was working with JPMorgan, causing the shares to rally to $6.56.

In 2017, GoPro sold 4.3 million cameras, a 9.6 percent fall compared to the prior year.

GoPro declined comment for this story.