It’s red-hot off the presses!

Monday’s edition of The Post became the must-have accessory in the Big Apple thanks to its full front- and back-page ads touting the cult skateboarding brand Supreme — with newsstands getting cleaned out almost before the sun came up.

Some bodega and deli owners near Supreme’s flagship Soho store — where fans routinely line up for hours to score new products — said they were sold out by 7:30 a.m.

“Most of the buyers today were young,’’ said Thomas Prakash, a worker at the Iconic Cafe on Lafayette Street, who sold out of his 20 copies three hours ahead of the typical time of 10:30 a.m.

“I knew they were not the usual customers because they asked for the paper. My usual customers just take it” from the stack before paying for it, Prakash said.

In the wee hours Monday, Supreme posted an Instragram video of its Post collector’s edition rolling off the presses in The Bronx — and users immediately began buying and selling the coveted copies.

One person said they’d be bringing 50 papers to the UK to hawk.

While the city’s favorite newspaper generally goes for $1 a pop, some people were selling single copies for anywhere from $5 to $100.

“Supreme is a streetwise brand with a lot of hype … Almost everything with Supreme’s logo or name resells for a profit, so many of us headed out early and picked up copies,” said Edward Haynes, 21, who left his Forest Hills, Queens, home at 5 a.m. to buy 146 copies, which he was reselling for between $8 and $10.

Haynes said he went to 10 different delis and newsstands to score the papers, although some owners were “hesitant as to why I even wanted their whole delivery.

“One owner said someone came yesterday and gave him a $20 bill to hold them all,” he noted, adding that another proprietor told him he just planned on stashing the copies he had for himself.

Supreme — a wildly popular skateboarding-shop chain and clothing brand that started in Manhattan in 1994 and is now global — is using the ad to help peddle its new catalogue of upcoming fall and winter fashions.

The company’s latest collection features everything from a “Dragon Work Jacket” to a Madonna T-shirt and Chameleon mountain bike.

Post Publisher and CEO Jesse Angelo said, “Today’s New York Post collaboration with Supreme is a true collector’s item.

“We love the design kinship of the logos and the affinity of the brands — bold, unexpected, always pushing-the-envelope, and always rooted in New York City. It was one of the coolest and most fun projects ever done by Post Studios, our in-house strategy and creative and agency for brands.’’

Bianca Jebbia, the wife of Supreme founder James Jebbia, said she got several copies for the kids.

Explaining that the family gets the paper nearly every day, the mom of two said, “It was a nice surprise for the kids to see Daddy on the cover of The Post this morning.”

Additional reporting by Kate Sheehy