Blizzard-battered New York City is set to get slammed with even more snow this week — proving the groundhog was right.
The monster blizzard is now officially one of the city’s 10 biggest winter storms on record.
As of 2 p.m. Monday, the storm had dumped 19.7 inches of snow on Central Park in Manhattan, beating out the blizzard of January 2011’s 19 inches, which had held the No. 9 “biggest” snowstorm on record.
A worker clears snow on a street as snow falls during a winter storm in New York City. REUTERS
The Sunday-into-Monday bomb-cyclone-fueled weather was the city’s biggest snowstorm in more than a decade.
The massive snow dump also proved Punxutawney Phil, the famed prognosticating Pennsylvania groundhog, was right.
Phil saw his shadow during the annual Feb. 2 ceremony featuring him, meaning there would be six more weeks of winter.
For the record, Staten Island Chuck — New York City’s version of forecasting varmints — also saw his shadow.
A front-end loader gathers snow by Madison Square Park in Manhattan. Stephen Yang for NY Post
His borough has seen the highest reported snowfall in a single location so far in the city during its latest snowstorm, with 24.1 inches measured in Grasmere, according to the National Weather Service.
In Brooklyn, 22.5 inches were measured in Sheepshead Bay, with Williamsburg and Crown Heights following with 21.1 and 21 inches, respectively.
In Manhattan, Washington Heights took the top spot for the most snowfall boroughwide with 22.1 inches measured so far.
A vehicle is seen covered in snow as a blizzard hits New York City. Paul Martinka for New York Post
In Queens, that distinction went to LaGuardia Airport with 22.2 inches of snow.
The Bronx reported just 14.8 inches in Co-Op city, marking the lowest snowfall total in NYC.
Outside the five boroughs, Nassau County’s Lynbrook on Long Island measured 24 inches and Suffolk County’s Babylon reported 29.5 inches so far.
Between this weekend’s storm and the 25-plus inches that fell across the Big Apple at the end of January, Punxsutawney Phil and New York City’s own Staten Island Chuck were on point with their premonitions this year.
Mayor Zohran Mamdani announced that schools will be back in session Tuesday after giving NYC schoolkids a three-day weekend.
Hizzoner said parts of the city could expect another 2.5 inches by tonight.