Two women who are deaf say they were barred from a Delta flight over an incident with a gate agent who refused to communicate with them via writing.

Socorro Garcia, 34, and Melissa Yingst, 40, went to the gate agent to see if they could be seated together on their flight home from Detroit Metropolitan Wayne County Airport to Los Angeles on Sunday night — but say the airline employee refused to communicate with them on paper and rolled her eyes at them instead.

The agent at the gate “kept talking to us without writing anything down,” Garcia wrote in a Facebook post after the incident — meaning the pair couldn’t understand what she was telling them.

When Yingst took out her cellphone to write down a question, “the gate agent rolled her eyes at us,” Garcia said.

“Melissa asked for her to write. After few moments, she finally wrote on a piece of paper and said the flight is full and can’t book us together,” Garcia said.

Garcia tried to reply but the agent allegedly crumbled up the paper and threw it out. When Garcia tried to retrieve the paper, she says the gate agent pushed her away.

“Melissa was stunned and took out her iPhone to take a video of her,” Garcia said. “I was shocked and asked for a paper and pen to communicate. She still refused and called the police on us.”

A video posted by the pair shows the gate agent, identified by the name “Felicia,” telling the pair they can’t be there as one of her co-workers asks if she wants her to call the cops.

The gate agent allegedly told cops Garcia had assaulted her and so the two were asked to leave.

“This really isn’t about us not being able to sit together but how they handled communication and refused to provide us access to the needs we asked for,” Yingst said, adding the experience was “very traumatic.”

Delta didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment from The Post.

The pair told the Detroit Free Press they’re considering suing unless the airline reimburses them for their flights and hotel, and requires that all Delta employees get trained on how to communicate with deaf passengers.