The popular online streaming site Hulu has struck a $700,000-per-episode deal to offer reruns of “Seinfeld,” according to a report.

The landmark deal will be made public Thursday during a presentation to advertisers in New York, The Wall Street Journal reported.

The profits will be split by distributor Sony TV, Time Warner’s Castle Rock production company and “Seinfeld” profit participants, including star/co-creator Jerry Seinfeld and co-creator Larry David.

Hulu will make available all 180 episodes of “Seinfeld,” which ran on NBC for nine seasons.

While details weren’t disclosed, other bidders for streaming rights to the groundbreaking 1990s sitcom included Amazon.com Inc. and Yahoo.com, the Journal reported.

Sony TV, which has long controlled distribution rights to the series on behalf of Castle Rock, for the past few months had been shopping the property for its first Subscription Video On Demand licensing pact.

A limited number of “Seinfeld” reruns have been available online via Sony TV’s ad-supported Crackle video platform, but the Hulu pact marks the first time the series will be available in its entirety in the era of streaming binge-viewing.

Hulu is co-owned by Walt Disney Co., 21st Century Fox Inc. and Comcast Corp.

The move follows Netflix’s purchase last year of the streaming rights to Warner Bros. TV’s “Friends.” The nostalgia hit has been reportedly doing well for that site.

Hulu also made a deal in February to stream reruns of more than 300 episodes of the long-running CBS crime drama “CSI.”

Despite the Hulu deal, “Seinfeld” reruns will still air on cable network TBS.