A judge’s decision to deny Jeffrey Epstein bail will encourage more women to come forward with allegations of sexual abuse when they were underage girls, a lawyer for several accusers said Thursday.

Manhattan federal Judge Richard Berman’s ruling made it “safer for everyone” to come forward against the multimillionaire financier and convicted pedophile, lawyer Sigrid McCawley said.

McCawley predicted that the number of current Epstein accusers was “just the tip of the iceberg” and said that she had signed up four new clients following Epstein’s July 6 arrest.

“They’ve been living in this cage of fear and intimidation ever since he committed these horrible crimes against them,” she said.

McCawley wouldn’t identify her new clients but said she encouraged them to report their alleged abuse to the FBI.

McCawley declined to say if any had been interviewed by the feds, but Manhattan federal prosecutor Alex Rossmiller on Monday told Berman that the case against Epstein was “getting stronger every day.”

Lawyers have previously said that Epstein’s arrest led at least a dozen women to contact them with allegations against him.

The Epstein accusers represented by McCawley include Annie Farmer, who testified against Epstein at a bail hearing on Monday.

Farmer said she “was 16 years old when I had the misfortune of meeting Mr. Epstein,” who “was inappropriate with me twice” inside his Upper East Side townhouse.

Berman cited the “compelling testimony” of Farmer and another accuser, Courtney Wild, while ordering Epstein locked up pending trial on child sex trafficking charges.

Epstein, 66, has pleaded not guilty to allegations he abused dozens of underage girls inside his townhouse and a waterfront mansion in Palm Beach, Florida, between 2002 and 2005.