New York may be the city that never sleeps — but for once, it’s not the sound of people getting shot that’s keeping Big Apple residents awake.

Not a single person was reported shot for all of Friday, Saturday and Sunday — marking the first city weekend free of shootings in at least a quarter-century, officials said Monday.

“I really don’t remember a weekend that no one was shot in the entire city,” NYPD Chief of Department Terence Monahan — on the job since 1982 — told The Post. “It’s a different city.”

This past weekend was the only Friday-Saturday-Sunday run without someone reported shot going back to at least 1993 — since before even the department’s 1995 adoption of its CompStat record-keeping system, according to the NYPD.

Mayor de Blasio took a victory lap over the statistic, crowing to an NYPD graduating class Monday morning, “I have to tell you, this is a winning team for sure. And to give you some evidence, about as recent as it can get, this last weekend — Friday, Saturday and Sunday — there was not a single shooting in all of New York City. Isn’t that amazing?”

The last shooting prior to the recent streak occurred Thursday morning in Brooklyn, when a 25-year-old man was blasted in the stomach near East 98th Street and Avenue J at around 11:30 a.m., according to officials.

Unfortunately, the city’s safety streak was snapped by Monday afternoon, when a man was shot at around 1:15 p.m. on Aqueduct Avenue in The Bronx, authorities said.

The 27-year-old victim caught a bullet in the ankle when a gunman opened fire near West 192nd Street in Fordham Manor, according to police.

The victim was rushed to St. Barnabas Hospital, where he’s expected to survive, even though the streak — which reached nearly 98 hours — did not.

Hizzoner credited the quiet weekend to the NYPD’s tenacity and tactics.

“This is working because the NYPD has the best strategy, the best training . . . because this department never rests on its laurels,” de Blasio said. “This department always seeks to get better.”

Commissioner James O’Neill added, “That’s something not just the NYPD, but . . . all New Yorkers [should] be proud of.”

The lucky run coincides with an overall drop in gunplay across the city.

According to the latest NYPD crime figures, current through Sunday, there have been 734 shootings so far in 2018, a 2.5 percent drop from the 753 at the same point in 2017.