Five hundred more cops called in sick Thursday — leaving NYPD without 11 percent of its officers who patrol the city streets as the coronavirus continues to disrupt staffing in the department, The Post has learned.

The Post has obtained a detailed summary of sick cops, broken down by rank, that shows sickness has hit rank-and-file officers and detectives more than any other rank in the NYPD.

The document shows 2,563 of the NYPD’s almost 24,000 police officers had called out Thursday morning — or about 10.7 percent of officers.

Almost 11 percent of all detectives were out — with 579 of the department’s 5,305 out ill, the record shows.

Five of the NYPD’s 33 surgeons were also sick. Additionally, 413 sergeants, 130 lieutenants, 22 captains and 31 people with a rank above captain had reported ill.

In total, 3,737 uniformed officers had called in sick or 10.3 percent of uniformed officers, the record shows.

The number calling in sick has ticked up daily over the last two weeks, as reports of officers coming down with coronavirus started to come out. Around 1,300 cops were out ill early last week.

NYPD members who tested positive for COVID-19 also increased through the day Thursday to 351 — 294 cops and 57 civilians, according to a spokesman for the NYPD.

Police Commissioner Dermot Shea previously reported 322 cases but expected the number to increase with “many more” tests pending.

Shea, though, has said the department would shift resources to account for the staffing shortage.

Mayor Bill de Blasio echoed the commissioner’s confidence in the NYPD being able to pick up the slack, saying the city hasn’t asked for any outside help for policing the Big Apple.

A spokesman for the NYPD did not comment on the current staffing levels.