NJ Transit commuters experienced a new kind of hell this morning when they were threatened by conductors on trains and kicked off buses after their MyTix app failed.

One pregnant woman said a bus driver kicked her off after she was unable to pull up her ticket on the malfunctioning app, which allows riders to purchase and display tickets.

“@NJTransit I am 7 months pregnant and the bus driver took me off the bus bc the app didn’t work and I only had $3 instead of the $4.50,” she tweeted, adding that she couldn’t buy a paper ticket because she didn’t have enough cash and no ATMs were around.

Nancy Snyder, NJ Transit spokeswoman, said staff were notified of app fail and should have been letting riders on — but some passengers encountered abrasive conductors who were unaware or didn’t care about the outage.

A disabled veteran told The Post that he was harassed by the conductor on his Penn Station bound train at around 9 a.m.

“I said the app’s not working and he said that’s not my problem, that’s your problem,” Steven Levy who has ridden the Raritan Line for ten years said.

Levy says his rude conductor repeatedly told him the app outage was not his problem and asked for a cash fare.

“I told him I don’t carry cash, and he kept saying ‘that’s not my problem.’ He was nasty.”

Levy says the conductor eventually walked away and that he reported the incident to customer service reps at Penn Station.

Another commuter said she had to stand up for a rider who was threatened and yelled at by their conductor.

“She repeatedly yelled demanding the fare or telling him to get off the train,” Anastasia Goldberg who works at Fox News, said.

Goldberg said she explained several times that the app wasn’t working but the abrasive conductor wasn’t having it.

“She demanded the man get off and he simply walked to the back of the train,” Goldberg said. “He didn’t get off because she couldn’t find him.”

The spokeswoman Snyder said the company is attempting to identify personnel who did not let customers on trains and that the outage, which was restored by 9:30 a.m., is a “rare incident.”

She said officials are also trying to reach out to the pregnant woman and are retraining the bus driver who threw her off.