Get ready to stand.

Subway cars outfitted with new foldable seats were spotted in an MTA rail yard on Wednesday, and they will hit the L line soon, officials said.

Photos show a car with almost all of the seats in the folded position that will force riders to stand instead of sit on their commutes.

The agency plans to lock the seats in the up position during morning and evening rush hours to make more room for passengers and cut down on the loading time at each station, according to the official.

“These should help people get on and off the trains faster and will also, of course, increase capacity,” the official said.

There will be four of the newly-outfitted cars on one eight-car train, said the source. And no car will have no seats. They will be staggered with benches alternating in the up and down positions, said the official.

The transit source declined to say exactly when the new cars will hit the L line, but it will likely be in the next week or two.

MTA chairman Joe Lhota announced in July that he wanted to remove seats from some trains as part of a multi-pronged plan to cut down on subway delays. The agency removed the seats at the ends of some of its E train cars earlier this month and replaced them with more poles for riders to hold.

The MTA also plans to add cars with a different configuration to the 42nd Street Shuttle, said the source.