You wouldn’t expect a couple of millennials who grew up on Napster to stake their career on vinyl — but the co-founders of Vinyl Me, Please have done just that.

Matt Fiedler, who with roomie Tyler Barstow co-founded their record-of-the-month club in January 2013, told The Post it began as “a labor of love.”

But with only 12 paying members at the outset, how could it not be?

Today, riding a wave in of interest in vinyl, the startup has nearly 26,000 paying members and is break-even and debt-free.

Plus, the company, which up to now has only offered a single LP per month, is set to launch a complementary single-genre offering called Tracks — which will allow members to choose a genre, like jazz, and receive an LP of various artists.

Each month’s selection is curated by Fiedler’s 15-member team — which judges the music itself plus the stories behind it and its creators.

For example, one month featured a counterculture Zimbabwe band, Wells Fargo, that spearheaded the “Heavy Music” movement behind the country’s War of Liberation in the 1970s.

“This is music that never even made it out of the country,” Fiedler says.

VMP’s target audience is mid-20s to late-30s — music lovers who find the streaming experience a “bit shallow,” says Fiedler, 29.

VMP subscriptions aren’t cheap, running between $25 and $29 a month.

On Amazon, “Exile on Main Street” by The Rolling Stones will run you $23.68.

VMP turned a corner in mid-2014 on reaching the 500-subscriber mark, a scale that not only allowed the commissioning of special pressings but also attracted the interest of music labels.

Along with each LP, members get an original art print, a custom cocktail recipe and access to VMP’s online store.

Overall, vinyl sales in 2017 are expected to post double-digit sales gains for the seventh straight year — with sales topping $1 billion.

Vinyl sales will grow to be 15 percent to 18 percent of the market, Fiedler predicts.