Donald Trump’s former personal lawyer apparently doesn’t spend a lot of time lawyering, new court papers show.

A Manhattan federal judge on Friday revealed that just a tiny portion of materials seized in an FBI raid on Michael Cohen were kept from prosecutors because of attorney-client privilege – and the vast majority are tied to Cohen’s communications with his own lawyers.

Just 168 documents have been kept from prosecutors so far because they are protected by attorney-client privilege, court papers show.

Of those, just eight pertain to Cohen’s direct communications with clients or potential clients, a filing Friday by Judge Kimba Wood shows.

The rest were linked to conversations Cohen had with his outside counsel – although nine items may have been tied to memos Cohen’s outside counsel wrote for either Cohen or his clients, the document said.

Wood made the disclosure Friday tied to a review of over 300,000 items found on Cohen’s phones and eight boxes of materials seized from Cohen’s residence and office in an FBI raid in April.

Among the items seized were documents tied to Cohen’s payments to porn star Stormy Daniels over her claims she had a one-night stand with Trump.

The judge said she expects lawyers for Cohen and Trump to finish their work by July.