The UCLA soccer coach who allegedly took a $100,000 kickback to get a real estate developer’s daughter into the school resigned on Thursday, a spokesperson for the school’s athletic department told The Post.

Jorge Salcedo, who served as a coach on the men’s soccer team, stepped down after allegedly accepting a bribe to get Lauren Isackson on the women’s team’s roster, spokeswoman Shana Wilson said.

Isackson, who was listed as a midfielder on the 2017 team website, had zero soccer experience and never played a game, prosecutors alleged.

Instead, she was accepted into the school as a soccer recruit after Salcedo accepted $100,000 through a sports marketing company from the apparent mastermind of the college admissions scam, Rick Singer, according to prosecutors.

Salcedo is now facing a conspiracy to commit racketeering charge.

Prosecutors allege Isackson’s father, Bruce Isackson, gave Singer 2,150 shares of Facebook stock worth $251,249 in 2016 to secure her a spot at the school.

Bruce Isackson’s first choice was for his daughter to attend USC as a phony athletic recruit, but Singer’s contacts at the school botched the scheme and placed her application in the regular admissions process, prosecutors said.

The former women’s soccer coach at USC then passed Isackson along to Salcedo at UCLA, prosecutors alleged. Singer also paid the USC coach $25,000, they said.

But unlike USC, where bogus athlete recruits simply didn’t join a sports team, Isackson was forced to be on the women’s soccer roster at UCLA for a year.

She was listed as a midfielder on the team’s website and given the number 41 — while her teammates were all number 00 through 28.

A profile of her on the team website claimed she was the former team captain at the Woodside Soccer Club from 2012-2016. But the soccer club told the Los Angeles Times that no one had ever heard of her.

“Nobody remembers this girl’s name,” Zak Ibsen, the club’s director of coaching, told the paper. “Smells fishy to me.”