A New Jersey man claims he was drugged at a Manhattan strip club — then taken to a second jiggle joint where he was charged thousands of dollars while blacked out in a caper reminiscent of “Hustlers,” according to a new $1 million lawsuit.

Scott White went to Hoops Cabaret and Sports Bar on 33rd Street on Sept. 11 around 9 p.m., where he ate chicken wings and drank beer for a few hours before leaving, he told The Post.

As the Hudson County man was departing a stranger came up asking if he wanted to go to another strip club called Vivid Cabaret on 37th Street, he says.

“I said ‘No, actually. I have no interest. I’m going home.’ I leave and this is where it gets fuzzy. I believe he drugged me. I get in, I believe, his car and he drives me to Vivid Cabaret,” White told The Post.

But 41-year-old tech consultant says he has no memory of being at Vivid and only later pieced together what happened through credit card receipts and by speaking with a manager, who told him he had paid for two dancers and run up a pricey tab using cash and his credit card.

“Defendants — acting in concert and as an enterprise — assaulted and drugged Plaintiff, defrauded Plaintiff, and converted Plaintiff’s monies through numerous unauthorized credit card charges and forced cash withdrawals,” according to a Manhattan Supreme Court lawsuit filed Tuesday against the clubs’ shared parent company RCI Management Services, as well as several John and Jane Does.

First, White went to Hoops to dispute the transactions on his card and they told him the charges were from their other location Vivid — so White tracked down the manager at Vivid and explained what happened, he said.

The manager told White, “that this driver was compensated to bring patrons there and they [drivers] get a 10-percent cut. I told him what happened and he offered to give me a free drink,” White told The Post.

When White showed the manager names of two women he had transferred money to that night, the manager said, “‘Those are dancers here.’ He said ‘we take this stuff real seriously’ and he said ‘if it happens again I’ll definitely get rid of them,'” White recounted.

“I don’t go to strip clubs often. I have never had a bad experience. I’ve never disputed a payment or lost consciousness. I feel like I didn’t do anything wrong because at some point I didn’t have any consciousness,” White said.

“It makes me afraid of even just drinking. It effects me going out and doing happy hour for work and doing business drinks. I feel like I want my life back but I can’t undo that,” he said.

White said he didn’t report the incident to police because he hoped to work it out with the clubs.

“I have not [reported it] mostly because I wanted to stay anonymous. Nobody wants to advertise that they are doing that. I was kind of afraid to. I tried to handle it directly at the source but then I realized it was a bigger problem,” White explained.

“Nobody was really listening to me [at the clubs]. They didn’t care. They weren’t incentivized to, because they are all connected to each other. There is incentive to drug them, and to bus them around from place to place and take things from them,” White said adding that this could be happening to others.

And it has — New Jersey cardiologist Dr. Zyad Kivarkis Younan racked up a $135,000 bill from notorious Manhattan jiggle joint Scores after he was drugged by dancers there. The tale inspired this year’s Jennifer Lopez flick “Hustlers, which follows a group of exotic dancers who fleece club patrons.

“The bottom line here is my client was victimized and wronged,” White’s lawyer, Ethan Kobre said. “He tried to resolve matters directly with the clubs and the individuals involved but their refusal to engage with him has left him no choice but to seek vindication through the courts. And that’s exactly what we indent to do.”

A patron at Vivid told The Post it’s easy to run up a tab at the club at night.

“But there’s supposed to be a cutoff. Like, your credit card company is supposed to call you and stop payments. In this case I’m guessing that didn’t happen,” the man chuckled. “I mean, I’ve heard of dancers doing this. They steal someone’s credit card. But they get fired. You report them and the managers deal with it.”

RCI said White was on surveillance video at Vivid and did not appear drugged.

“We don’t normally comment on litigation, but in this case, we’d like you to understand the facts. Our records show the total amount Mr. White spent was $574 at Hoops and $5,912 at Vivid. We have him on video tape at both locations, including at Vivid signing for the $5,912 charge and giving his thumbprint, as is the long-standing policy for any large credit card charge,” company rep Ed Anakar said.

“In the video, Mr. White is coherent and there is no indication that he is impaired in any manner. The tape also shows him shaking the manager’s hand and talking to another person with him. If he was drugged as he claims, the NYPD has yet to come to us asking for the video tape even though Mr. White’s visit occurred more than two months ago.”