The former NYPD cop who admitted breaking into a stranger’s home in Nashville and hurling racial slurs at her has filed for bankruptcy, court papers show.

Michael Reynolds, who previously worked as a cop in Manhattan, filed the bankruptcy papers in the Southern District of New York on Wednesday.

The papers list Conese Halliburton — the woman whose house Reynolds broke into in July 2018 — as one of three creditors Reynolds owes money to. It’s not clear if his bankruptcy declaration will affect his debt owed to Halliburton.

Reynolds, 26, had pleaded no contest in September to multiple counts of assault with fear of bodily injury and aggravated criminal trespass for the Nashville incident.

He had been staying at an Airbnb in Nashville when he barged into Halliburton’s home, said he would break every bone in her neck and called her and her two children, “f–king n—-rs.” He was sentenced to 15 days in jail in November 2019.

Halliburton has since filed a $5 million civil suit against the former cop, claiming he caused her significant emotional distress, the Tennessean reported.

Reynolds resigned from the NYPD in January, police said.

“He will receive no pension or health benefits, nor will he be allowed to carry a firearm,” police spokesperson Devora Kaye said at the time.

A man who answered the phone at Reynolds’ Rockland County home on Wednesday night said he was not there and would not provide a cellphone number for the disgraced cop.