The US women’s national soccer team started their victory tour in New York on Tuesday morning — proudly declaring that the world’s most popular sport is now “female-dominated.”

The World Cup champs are celebrating in the Big Apple, where they will be honored Wednesday with a ticker-tape parade along the Canyon of Heroes in Lower Manhattan.

The team, decked out in black T-shirts with “World Champions” written in gold, started their celebrations early with an appearance on “Good Morning America,” where they were greeted in the studio with chants of “USA! USA!”

Star striker Megan Rapinoe couldn’t hide her joy at the players being called a “dynasty.”

“Yeah, it suits us, right? If the shoe fits, you’ve gotta put it on,” said a smiling Rapinoe, while showing off a photo of her as a child watching the 1999 World Cup.

But the biggest cheers came when a young girl in the audience asked what it was like “to play in a male-dominated sport” — and midfielder Allie Long insisted they’d turned it into a “female-dominated sport.”

“We’re the best team in the world for a reason … I truly feel that we’re dominating the sport right now and we’re giving you guys, the youth, a platform to dream big and hopefully get there some day. Hopefully by the time you get to our age — world domination.”

Rapinoe also said it was “time for action” to get equal pay for women players, insisting everyone involved in the sport had a part to play.

“The conversation needs to move from, ‘Are we worth it? Shall we have equal pay?’ ” Rapinoe said. “For all the fans … go watch your team. Watch the national team, watch your local club teams. I think there’s a part in this for everybody to do. Now it’s time for action.”

Team coach Jill Ellis proudly called them the “greatest team I’ve ever been involved with.”

“They are incredible soccer players but they’re even better people,” she said. “I think it’s the bond that they have with each other that gave us such a force when we stepped on the field.”