Aaron Judge is ruling Major League Baseball jersey sales, The Post has learned.

There were more baseball jerseys sold with Judge’s name on them than any other player since early May, MLB confirmed to The Post.

In fact, the number of Judge jersey sales has more than doubled in the June 1-13 period compared to sales in the May 1-13 period, MLB said.

The Judge jerseys displaced those bearing the name of Cubs third baseman Kris Bryant that were at the top of the sales charts for two full seasons.

Bryant broke into the majors in 2015 and quickly moved to the top of the jerseys ranking even before his Cubs won the 2016 World Series.

“I think Judge is representative of this Yankees team, which is very young and very likable,” Yankees President Randy Levine told The Post.

Levine emphasized that fans may have their own favorites, but they all want to see the Yankees.

Still, Judge who leads the American League in home runs, and is second in both batting average and runs batted in going into Thursday’s action is quickly becoming the face of the team.

The Yankees are working on making white wigs with Judge’s name to sell as souvenirs, a source said.

“It is great for baseball to have a likable multi-racial star at a time baseball has lost some popularity with minorities,” a baseball source said.

The rest of the top five selling jerseys: the Cubs’ Bryant and Anthony Rizzo, the Dodgers’ Clayton Kershaw and the Giants’ Buster Posey, all white players.

Six of the 10 players who topped the jerseys list from the end of the 2016 World Series until the start of this season still make the top 10 list for the last four weeks ending June 13.

That includes Yankees catcher Gary Sanchez, who fell from ninth before the season started to now being 10th.

Besides the Cubs, the Yankees are the only other team with two players among the top 10 in jersey sales.

Mets pitcher Noah Syndergaard was sixth at the start of this season, but now is out of the top 10. No Mets are currently in the top 15.

Jersey revenues are shared among all 30 teams. The Yankees keep the retail markup for jerseys sold at Yankee Stadium or through Yankees team stores just like any other retailer does, but the profit on the jerseys themselves are shared equally, sources said.