Mayor de Blasio’s controversial plan to eliminate the admission test for the city’s top high schools is officially on hold in Albany, the leader of the state Assembly said Thursday.

Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie (D-Bronx) said a bill that de Blasio needs enacted into law — and which narrowly passed the Education Committee on Wednesday — wouldn’t advance further before the scheduled June 20 end of the legislative session.

“After speaking to members of the caucus and also the Asian Pacific Task Force as well, we want to come up with something that is good for all students, so I think over the next few months and into the next session we’ll be having discussions with all of the stakeholders and all of the communities, including the Asian-American community, to come up with something that’s good for all students in the city of New York,” Heastie ​told reporters.

De Blasio wants to scrap the “Specialized High School Admission Test” as part of a proposal to increase the number of black and Hispanic students at the city’s eight elite public high schools, which are predominantly populated by Asian-American kids.

Seats in the schools would instead be granted to the top 7 percent of seventh-graders in each middle school.

Gov. Cuomo has yet to take a position on de Blasio’s plan — which has come under fire from Asian-American activists and others — but said Tuesday that it “will be part of the overall discussion” regarding continued mayoral control of the city’s schools, which expires next year.

Heastie was more circumspect in his remarks Thursday, saying: “These things, education policy, what happens in these specialized schools, what happens in middle schools and what happens in elementary schools is all policy.”

“They’re all going to come up in the same year, but I don’t know if there’s a direct linkage or a dependency on one or the other,” he added.