New Yorkers really love these “oui” pups.

For the fourth year in a row, the diminutive French bulldog was the most popular breed in the Big Apple, The American Kennel Club announced Wednesday.

“Not surprised,” said Adam Kassl, a French bulldog breeder for nearly 10 years and owner of N.Y. Frenchies. “This breed is very flexible, they’re very low maintenance, just a great overall apartment dog.”

The squishy-faced pooches can set owners back anywhere from $2,500 to $20,000 depending on color and other factors — but it’s a small price to pay for the status that comes with owning Gotham’s hottest pooch.

“It’s like a fashion symbol, more or less,” he noted.

The dog’s popularity — based on the number of registered pooches — is responsible for an uptick in inexperienced breeders taking advantage of clueless customers, Kassl said, warning prospective owners to do their research.

The city’s four-legged runner-up is the Labrador retriever — the top dog nationwide for the 27th consecutive year.

Golden retrievers knocked poodles down a notch and snagged fifth place in the city. The Cavalier King Charles spaniel jumped from 13th to seventh place and was the most popular pup in Park Slope and the Upper East Side.

Frenchies are especially in demand in Chelsea, Williamsburg, Murray Hill, Astoria and the Upper West Side.

But in Washington Heights, massive Great Danes top the list. And in the East Village, bulldogs win the canine popularity contest.

Always the trendsetters, New Yorkers predicted the French bulldog surge. The breed hit its highest-ever nationwide ranking, at number 4. The breed has bolted from 76th to fourth in 20 years.

French bulldogs made headlines recently when a Frenchie puppy died after a flight attendant forced it into an overhead bin on a United flight.

They’re also a celebrity favorite, with the late Carrie Fisher’s Frenchie, Gary, inspiring an alien creature in last year’s “Star Wars: The Last Jedi.”

With Post wires