A New York City Ferry boat crashed into a sandbar and suffered damage to hull Monday evening, taking on some water and causing the passengers to disembark onto another vessel.

The Zelinsky ferry boat pulled out of Pier 11 at 5:15 p.m. in Lower Manhattan and was headed to the Rockaways before it got stuck on the sandbar, which is about 100 feet away from the pier, the FDNY said.

“The boat ran aground, it was spinning its propellers, it also broke part of the hull — there was a slight leak in the boat,” FDNY Deputy Chief John Sarrocco said.

The boat was not in danger of sinking, he added

Passengers said they were ushered onto another vessel and taken back to Manhattan.

“The boat was grounded and taking on water,” one person said as they disembarked at Wall Street’s Pier 11.

“The passengers were very very scared. The bilge pulp went out.”

The mayor’s press secretary tweeted Monday night that there were no reported injuries.

“Tug boat pushing ferry loose and passengers hopping on another boat,” the spokesman, Eric Phillips wrote.

A video from the ferry posted on YouTube shows the passengers donning their vests as FDNY personnel attend to the vessel.

One passenger said that they were told that the incident was due to low tide and the boat hitting the sea floor.

A total of 123 passengers were aboard the rush-hour ride.

The Zelinsky ferry boat was involved in a separate incident back in April when it struck a submerged object near Coney Island.

According to Workboat.com, the boat received damage to the hull and took on water as crews assisted the vessel by using 5 dewatering pumps. It was then towed up the Hudson River.

The incident occurred the same day The Post published an expose about major structural flaws in the ferry boats.