Juul Labs’ plan to curb teen vaping by removing fruit-flavored nicotine “pods” from its e-cigarettes has been more than offset by a massive leap in its sales of mint-flavored pods, The Post has learned.

Since Juul stopped selling mango, fruit, creme and cucumber flavored pods to brick-and-mortar stores last year, sales of its mint flavored pods have skyrocketed — so much so that they already dwarf revenue for the other flavored pods combined, according to proprietary Nielsen data and sources with knowledge of the sales.

As of August, Juul’s mint pods, which reviewers say tastes like candy cane or Altoids, were raking in annualized sales of $2.36 billion, according to Nielsen data obtained by The Post. That’s a 200 percent gain over the mint pods’ annualized sales of $791 million in October, right before Juul pulled mango, cucumber and other flavors from stores, sources said.

It’s also a leaps and bounds over mango, which had previously been Juul’s biggest seller with annualized sales of $887 million, sources said.

In November, the San Francisco-based Juul said it stopped accepting retail orders for mango, cucumber, fruit and creme flavored pods until retailers could adopt age-verification technology to stop teen vaping. Juul made the change to appease the FDA, which was reportedly considering banning flavored pods due to concerns about what it’s then-commissioner called the teen vaping “epidemic.”

Before the ban, sales of Juul’s mango and mint pods represented the vast majority of Juul’s sales — or 74.7 percent, Nielsen data shows. Combined, the two flavors were selling some $1.6 billion annualized.

Now mint flavored pods make up close to 75 percent of Juul’s rapidly rising revenue with annualized sales of $2.36 billion, the data shows.

On Wednesday, Trump’s Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said the Trump administration is preparing to ban all flavored e-ciggarettes amid concerns about what appear to be a rise in vaping-related deaths. At least 450 people across the country have fallen ill with mystery lung issues from vaping and some six deaths have been reported, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

FDA data shows that 68 percent of high-school aged e-cig users prefer flavored pods, leading critics to blast Juul’s decision last year to continue selling mint flavored pods in stores.

“Juul knew kids won’t addict if there’s no flavor,” Dr. Rob Crane, the Ohio State University professor who founded Preventing Tobacco Addiction Foundation, told The Post. “But it also knew kids would accept mint as an effective substitute.”

Sales of Juul’s menthol pods have also risen since November, but not nearly as much as mint and the category still represent less than 10 percent of all sales, the data shows. That’s because unlike mint, which tastes refreshing like chewing gum, menthol tastes like cough syrup, reviewers explained.

Juul said it kept its mint flavor on the market not to introduce more youngsters to smoking but to help adults shake the habit.

“For menthol-based products, including mint, we believe that to encourage adult smokers to switch from combustible use — the No. 1 cause of preventable death in the world — they should be available at retail alongside tobacco and menthol-based cigarettes,” a Juul spokesman said.