Two more women are suing Jeffrey Epstein’s estate, claiming in their $100 million suit that they were lured to his home under false pretenses and sexually assaulted.

The women were both working as hostesses at the now-shuttered Coffee Shop in Union Square when they were recruited by a woman in June 2004. They are not identified in the complaint filed late Thursday in Manhattan federal court.

The recruiter, identified under the pseudonym Sue Roe, told the pair that her “boss” liked to give young girls “opportunities” — and offered them hundreds of dollars in cash in exchange for massaging him at his East 71st Street mansion, the suit said.

“Unbeknownst to plaintiffs, the massages were mere facades,” the filing said. “Epstein employed the term ‘massage’ to fraudulently lure plaintiffs to his home to sexually touch them against their will and force them to watch him masturbate.”

The struggling aspiring models took the gig, with one of them, Jane Doe 1, being “reassured by Roe that the massage would not involve any unwanted touching.”

But she soon learned that was a lie, according to the suit.

Epstein “became increasingly more aggressive, made sexual advances and masturbated” during his rubdown with Jane Doe 1.

“Epstein, forcefully and without warning, grabbed Jane Doe 1’s breasts and vagina and then masturbated to completion,” the suit said.

She received “hundreds of dollars” for the deed — and was even offered a job by Roe afterward to “scout other women” for money. The victim declined.

A couple of days later, Epstein allegedly groped Jane Doe 2 during their massage and then “forcefully penetrated” her with his hand and an object, the suit said.

The women are suing under the federal Trafficking Victims Protection Act, claiming they were preyed upon in “a deliberate plan and scheme by Epstein, and carried out by Roe, to ensure that his victims were unaware that they were victims to avoid criminal and civil liability.”

“We seek significant money damages for the psychological devastation Mr. Epstein’s predation caused to our clients’ lives: their anguish, damaged relationships, self esteem, career derailment and much more,” their attorney Lisa Bloom said in a statement.

The women’s accusations are similar to those lodged by Jennifer Araoz, who also said she was recruited as a teen and raped by Epstein during a massage. The now-32-year-old Queens resident announced her lawsuit against the late pedophile’s estate earlier this week.

Epstein, 66, died in an apparent suicide Saturday while locked up on sex-trafficking charges at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Lower Manhattan.

His lawyers didn’t immediately return messages.