WrestleMania is going from the Big Easy back to the Big Apple.

WWE will announce during a press conference Friday at MetLife Stadium that the show, which is in New Orleans this year, will return to the home of the Giants and Jets in 2019, the company told The Post.

Its premier event will be held on April 7, 2019, exactly six years to the day of WrestleMania 29 at MetLife Stadium in 2013. WrestleMania 35 heading back to the New York and New Jersey area was first reported by Barstool Sports.

“When we got it [in 2013] it was everything and more [than] what we expected,” said Ron VanDeVeen, the president of MetLife Stadium. “Our motto right after we had it was, ‘Bring it back.’”

WWE will also announce the shows surrounding WrestleMania — the Hall of Fame induction ceremony, NXT TakeOver, “Monday Night Raw” and “SmackDown Live” — will be held at Barclays Center.

WrestleMania week, like the days around the past three SummerSlams in Brooklyn, also includes more than a dozen community-based events, including hospital and community center visits and working with groups like the Make-A-Wish Foundation.

It is the eighth time WrestleMania will be in the New York/New Jersey area, including WrestleMania 1 at Madison Square Garden.

“There is so much to celebrate in WrestleMania returning to New York and New Jersey in 2019, where we look forward to building upon all the amazing successes from 2013,” said John Saboor, WWE’s executive vice president of special events.

New York/New Jersey beat out 15 other cities that bid for any combination of WrestleMania 33, 34 and 35, according to Saboor. The New York/New Jersey bid stood out to WWE because of the facilities, hotels and community outreach opportunities, coupled with the company’s rich history in the area and the job MetLife and its partners did hosting in 2013.

“This is certainly designed in part to reward a host city that did a magnificent job hosting the WWE Universe in 2013,” Saboor said.

In 2013, the show, which brought an announced crowd of 80,676 to MetLife Stadium, generated $101.2 million in economic impact for the New Jersey/New York region, according to a study conducted by the Enigma Research Corporation.

There is an opportunity to exceed that number with the additional NXT and SmackDown shows. Last year in Orlando, 165,000 fans from all 50 states and 62 countries attended the ticketed WrestleMania-week events, according to Saboor.

“It really is amazing when you start talking about how excited people get when you say WrestleMania is coming to this region again and when it was coming the first time how excited people got from it,” said Van DeVeen, who worked with NYC & Company, the NJ Sports and Exposition Authority, Brooklyn Sport & Entertainment and others on the bid.

Saboor, who reiterated the company’s strong relationship with Madison Square Garden, wouldn’t say for sure how Barclays Center hosting WrestleMania week events will impact the building’s chances of landing SummerSlam for a sixth straight year.

“We are going to look to the horizon and make the decisions that are best for our WWE fanbase, and I don’t know that we’ll have necessarily gotten to that juncture yet, but New York, its fans and our domestic and international fans have shown that they love being in destination cities, and certainly New York and New Jersey are not exceptions,” Saboor said.

It will be the second time since 2013 that WrestleMania will be held in the same city twice, with New Orleans hosting in 2014 and this year. The event has also been held in Florida and Texas more than once since it regularly became a football stadium show in 2007.