The MTA’s newest headache might be its cutest!

Raccoons have been busted ruining straphangers commutes nearly a dozen times this year — more than twice as often as last year, MTA records show.

Officials report 11 raccoon-related disruptions so far this year, more than double the five in all of 2018.

The A, L and Q lines — which run through some of the most suburban parts of the city — were hardest hit, sources told The City.

Photos taken last night show one of the masked marauders managed to make its way onto the platform at Brooklyn’s Nevins Street station.

“yo there’s a whole ass raccoon at the platform Brooklyn bound at Nevins St. can you help him?” Straphanger @oswaldthehedgie tweeted at the MTA, along with a photo of the pesky animal.

Service was not disrupted, MTA officials told The Post — but straphangers at Nevins have not always been so lucky.

The critters struck twice on Nov. 2, first to delaying southbound trains at the station at 10:51 p.m. — and 56 minutes later, they disrupted the northbound IRT service.

“He popped back up, and from what we’re hearing he managed to escape again,” the @NYCTSubway account posted on Twitter at 11:55 p.m. Trains were back in service ten minutes later.

And just this Saturday night, one of the four-legged culprits delayed L trains after a Canarsie-bound train struck it near the Broadway Junction station.

The potentially-rabid critters aren’t the only mammals delaying trains, according to MTA data.

Opossums have caused nine delays, while cats caused seven, birds were linked to four — and even one was chalked up to a turkey.