Playing the lottery is about to get a whole lot lazier.

The state Gaming Commission has approved new rules allowing “courier services” to buy your Take 5 and Mega Millions tickets for you, in case that trip to the bodega is just too taxing.

One such service is Jackpocket, a midtown-based purchasing app that briefly launched in New York in 2015. It hopes to be back in business in the state sometime this summer.

The company intends to apply for a state license as soon as the Gaming Commission makes such licenses available.

The service, operating in Minnesota, New Hampshire and Texas, goes out and buys lottery tickets for customers.

It uploads a photo of the ticket to the app and even hand delivers any winnings if they’re more than $600.

Jackpocket already has a brick-and-mortar store in Greenpoint called Winners Corner, where its sells board and card games. It’s looking to install a lottery machine there, where Jackpocket workers would be able to buy tickets for app customers.

The service charges 7 to 10 percent every time a player reloads his or her account.

“Our app is attracting a lot of millennials and younger audiences,” said Sarah Arvizo, a Jackpocket spokeswoman.

She said players have won $1 million total so far this year.

The company did not disclose how many people are using the app.

The new regulations, which were approved by the Gaming Commission in March, require the courier services to notify winners within one hour of the commission publishing winning numbers.