A daredevil who posted Instagram photos of himself scaling risky heights died after falling from a West Village building, according to police.

The body of Jackson Coe, 25, was discovered in the backyard of the six-story building at 160 Waverly Place near Grove Street around 7:50 a.m. Thursday — bearing injuries consistent with a fall, cops said.

Coe had been drinking with a friend beforehand, law enforcement sources told The Post.

“There was a beer can next to him,” one building neighbor told The Post on Thursday, adding that they had called an ambulance. “We just thought he was drunk.”

One photo Coe posted to Instagram in April shows him dangling his legs off the side of a very tall building in Manhattan while wearing bright-red Nikes.

“What the hell are you doing,” his mom commented on the pic.

“hahaha just on a roof,” he replied.

Another risky snap last year was taken from the edge of a mountain in Banff, Alberta. Others show Coe and his friends backflipping into the ocean off of cliffs and boats.

Following Coe’s death, a friend posted a photo on Instagram of the pair drinking shirtless on the roof of Williamsburg’s William Vale hotel.

“You’ve left me with some of the best memories — I’m so sad that you won’t be able to bless us with more,” Louis Con wrote. “Rest easy my brother.”

Coe — who lived in Crown Heights, Brooklyn — worked as a growth-marketing associate at GrubHub, the food-ordering website confirmed.

“We are deeply saddened by this news, and our thoughts are with Jackson’s family and friends during this difficult time,” a spokesperson said in a statement.

He’d previously worked for Tough Mudder — which runs extreme endurance events. Coe posted a video of himself doing flips off a trapeze and into a pool of water during a 2016 Tough Mudder event in Long Island.

He’s not the first Big Apple thrill-seeker to plummet to his death. In 2016, extreme photographer Christopher Serrano fatally fell while surfing on top of an F train at age 25. He also posted several Instagram photos of his legs dangling off the side of skyscrapers.

And a year earlier, 20-year-old Connor Cummings fell while trying to snap photos from scaffolding on top of the Midtown Four Seasons Hotel.