Jared Kushner has made yet more errors on a routine financial disclosure form about two Brooklyn building loans, according to a report.

Kushner’s ethics form — which has been updated 40 times since March 2017 — misstated financials about loans that Kushner Cos. made to projects at 215 Moore St. and 9 DeKalb Ave., ProPublica reported.

A rep for the top White House adviser and presidential son-in-law confirmed the errors to the news outlet, attributing them to data-entry and accounting mistakes and saying the figures will be revised soon.

The paperwork suggests the loans could have generated more income from interest in a roughly yearlong period than the actual total value of the loans themselves.

Kushner’s rep said the correct income ranges are $50,001-$100,000 on the 9 DeKalb loan and $15,001-$50,000 on the loan for 215 Moore St. in Bushwick.

The loan to 215 Moore was for more than $30 million, but Kushner’s disclosure gave a value of just $100,000 to $250,000. His rep told ProPublica that the value represents Kushner’s share.

Kushner Cos. — which in 2016 made a push to get into the business of lending money to other developers — has pulled out from both of those loans, according to ProPublica.

A previous form that Kushner submitted — his application for a security clearance — also contained a slew of mistakes, omissions and errors. His clearance was recently downgraded.

“I have never seen that level of mistakes,” Charles Phalen, chief of the National Background Investigations Bureau, told the Forward about Kushner’s application.