Mohammed Bhuiyan has a tip for the Brooklyn teen who took his tips, and it’s simple: “Stop stealing.”

The Uber driver spoke to The Post on Tuesday about the brazen Aug. 12 incident, in which 18-year-old Gabrielle Canales was caught with her hand in the tip jar — while idiotically staring into the man’s dashcam.

The malevolent millennial can be seen on video, which went viral this week, swiping several bucks right under Bhuiyan’s nose as he drops her and two friends off at a Goodwill store near Livingston Street and Bond Street.

She then takes off running moments later, wearing only a bra and skirt.

“I didn’t notice until the lady was gone,” Bhuiyan said. “She ran off somewhere. I couldn’t find her. The two people she was with tried to say they [didn’t] know her. I said, ‘You guys came together, I picked you guys up together. What do you mean you don’t know her?’ Then I told them, ‘OK, I have a dashcam, I’m going to complain to Uber.'”

While he’s not certain, Bhuiyan believes Canales took about $10 or $12 from the jar — but she claimed on social media that it was only $5. He said he contacted Uber about the incident, but there was really nothing they could do, so they suggested he file a police report.

“I told them that the young lady took my money from my tip jar and they said she advised them that she didn’t,” Bhuiyan said.” They wanted me to go to the police station, but you know, the last time I went to the police station — it was a long time ago, after I had an accident — and it took way too long, maybe three to four hours, just to file an accident report. It was a bad experience. They also took long getting [to the scene]. I had to call [911] three or four times. So because of that, I didn’t go to the police.”

Instead, Bhuiyan chose to spend the time driving for Uber and making money — rather than wasting it over less than $20.

“I said to myself, ‘Ok, it’s not too much money, if I call the police, I have to wait hours, but if I work those hours, I can make more money,'” he explained. “So I just let Uber know and waited to see if maybe they can do something.”

Canales has since been banned from the ride-hailing service, which according to Bhuiyan, is enough punishment in his eyes.

“I’m really not pissed about the money, it was not a big amount,” he said. “I think she got what she deserved. The thing is, though, those kind of people — doing this kind of stuff, the stealing — this is not a good thing for the company. Most of my riders, they are very nice. So these kind of people really make [riders] look bad.”

Bhuiyan told The Post that he thinks Canales wasn’t actually staring at his dashcam during the incident, but rather his rearview mirror — which is located right underneath.

“It’s close to the mirror. Almost the same place,” he said. “I think she’s looking at the mirror and trying to look at me. Maybe she saw the camera, too, I don’t know. Because they are in the same place, if she looks at the mirror, she looks at the camera, too.”

Bhuiyan said that while he forgives Canales, he has still been warning his buddies, who are also drivers, about her thieving ways.

“I’ve been telling all of my friends, ‘If you see this person, don’t pick her up. She may steal her money,'” he said. “I’ve been showing them and others the video, letting them know that she’s a thief.”

Asked why he thought she took the money, Bhuiyan said: “I have no idea.”

“If I saw her again, I’d tell her to be honest. To stop stealing, and be nice,” he added.

Bhuiyan remembered several occasions where other riders found things in his car — which didn’t belong to them — and they returned them to him or the owners, no questions asked.

“Yesterday I had one rider who [found] a check — somebody left a signed check — inside my car and she gave it to me,” he said. “We checked the address and I sent it to the person who left it. That’s the things people should be doing. Not stealing.”