The Trump Organization has given the Secret Service the boot — kicking them out of Trump Tower and ordering them to find space “elsewhere” — following a dispute over the terms of their lease, a report says.

Sources familiar with the discussions told The Washington Post on Thursday that the government is currently looking for a new place to house the Secret Service command center after President Trump’s company refused to let the agency stay at his place.

“After much consideration, it was mutually determined that it would be more cost effective and logistically practical for the Secret Service to lease space elsewhere,” spokeswoman Amanda Miller wrote in an email to the newspaper.

The Secret Service command post is currently located outside of Trump Tower, in a trailer on the sidewalk, after being moved from the unit below the president’s apartment in early July.

It has been operating at the building since Trump took office — and security experts now warn that a lack of a command center could spell trouble, should an emergency arise.

“It’s a security deficiency that has to be resolved,” explained a former Secret Service official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

“It’s like having the quarterback of the football game actually being located in a different stadium than where the game is being played,” they said.

Even with the post on the ground, experts are worried that radio transmissions could fail due to the distance between it and agents in the field.

To compensate, a Secret Service official said the agency would be upping the number of standing posts and adding agents throughout the building.

While the president rarely visits Trump Tower, it is still considered his permanent home and is required to have a full-time detail protecting it. First Lady Melania Trump and their son, Barron, lived at the Manhattan building for several months before moving to Washington in June.

Details of the dispute between the Trump Organization and the Secret Service were not initially clear Thursday, but sources said it dealt with the price of the command post lease and other unspecified conditions.

The two parties apparently couldn’t agree on the terms of the deal and reportedly agreed to part ways.

A spokeswoman for the Secret Service said the agency is now working to “obtain permanent work space in an appropriate location.”

“The space is still in the process of being obtained and a final decision has not been made,” added Pamela Dixon, spokeswoman for the General Services Administration, which is in charge of securing government space.

The US military has reportedly landed a lease in Trump Tower for $130,000 a month. But that space is expected to be used as the White House Military Office.

The deal was said to be brokered by Joel Anderson, a businessman who owns the space.

“It was a standard lease negotiation, like any other, and had all of the same parts,” he told the Post. “The only thing that made it difficult it is they’re bureaucratic, and it takes them forever to do anything. They’re not bad to deal with, they’re just slow.”