Blade has begun deploying helicopters in the Big Apple to quickly transport human organs for emergency transplants.

The helicopter-sharing app — better known for flying summer beachgoers from New York City to the Hamptons — has teamed up with NYU Langone Health to give doctors faster access to vital organs, The Post has learned.

Blade’s 90-plus helicopters have been made accessible for dispatch between NYU Langone and hospitals up to 400 miles away. Sometimes a medical team will fly to another hospital to procure an organ, and other times it will deliver one, a Langone spokeswoman said.

With the new service, patients who previously had to wait five hours for an organ may now only have to wait only three hours, said Brigitte Sullivan, executive director of the NYU Langone Transplant Institute.

“In organ transplantation, every minute counts,” Sullivan said. “And the shorter the time that the organ is traveling, the better it will work when transplanted.”

Branded Blade MediMobility, the new service made its first organ delivery on Aug. 28 and has since transported 25 transplant organs, according to Blade Chief Executive Rob Wiesenthal. He said he plans to extend the service to other hospitals in the area.

“Our platform is ideally suited to provide NYU Langone with 24/7 access to safety-vetted rotorcraft with as little as 20 minutes notice,” Wiesenthal said.

The new service, which Wiesenthal says is operating at “less than breakeven,” may help deflect some of the barbs Blade has felt from local residents, particularly in the Hamptons, who have been caught under its noisy flight paths.