Former Mets legend Lenny Dykstra moved out of his New Jersey home that was the target of numerous quality-of-life complaints — telling the former neighbors who reported him to “go f–k themselves” on Monday.

“I made the house a great home,” Dykstra, 56, told NJ.com about his old Linden abode on Stockton Circle, which he recently sold for $439,000. “Those Stockton-ites can go f–k themselves. They complained they heard my chicks screaming during sex. Now they don’t have to hear it anymore.”

The former center fielder added: “I’m a giver. I’m a helper. I’m a man of the people. I took a Hurricane Sandy (-damaged) home and made it shine. I did wonders for that neighborhood.”

Shortly after he bought the house in 2017 for $347,500, neighbors in the quiet cul-de-sac complained that Dykstra turned the single-family home into a rooming house, the report said.

Cops also responded to the address multiple times for reports of fights and vandalism.

The ex-baseball player known as “Nails” eventually was fined $3,000 for violating a local zoning law, the site said.

Meanwhile, Dykstra on Monday appeared to have no qualms about local enforcement, who busted him for allegedly threatening to kill an Uber driver last fall — a charge that eventually was dropped after he pleaded guilty to disorderly conduct.

“The local officials and the police have all been good to me. The police knew me by name and were friendly,” Dykstra said.

Dykstra said he moved to a home in Livingston that’s owned by a friend but didn’t want to reveal the exact address.