President Trump wants more privacy when it comes to his opinions about materials that have been Ok’d for use in a federal probe into his personal lawyer and “fixer” Michael Cohen, it emerged on Wednesday.

In a letter filed in court late Wednesday, Trump’s lawyer asked a Manhattan federal judge for permission to file “under seal and ex parte” any objections Trump might have to decisions made by “special master” Barbara Jones in her review of materials seized in an FBI probe into Cohen.

Jones was appointed by Judge Kimba Wood to decide which of the materials seized by the feds are protected by attorney-client privilege and therefore off limits to their probe — including Cohen’s communications with President Trump.

Trump’s request for more privacy follows Jones’ revelation on Monday that just 162 items seized in the feds’ raid on Cohen’s office, residence and hotel room have been designated off-limits to the feds so far. That is less than 0.1 percent of the roughly 300,000 items reviewed.

For the most part, Jones agreed with Cohen and Trump about what materials should be classified, according to her report.

But she disagreed with them on three items in a review of 639 reviewed from eight boxes of documents, she said.

The government has objected to Trump and Cohen filing their objections to the special masters’ findings entirely under seal, according to Wednesday’s letter from lawyer Joanna Hendon.