Foreign diplomats racked up 4,747 parking summonses in the city in fiscal year 2015, records reveal.
Their drivers were caught parked in no-standing zones 2,384 times, in front of fire hydrants 209 times, in bus stops 119 times and double-parked in areas outside Midtown 185 times, according to the records, which were analyzed by The Post and AAA Northeast.
The most popular block for diplomats to flout the law was on East 43rd Street between Second and Third avenues, where traffic cops cited diplomats with 216 tickets.
The top offender was a diplomat whose black Mercedes was slapped with 43 violations. It’s not known what nation the official represents.
Diplomats owe the city more than $16 million in fees from 219,902 parking violations, The Post reported in March. Of those tickets, 18,008 were written to officials from Egypt, which owes $1.97 million, the most of any country.
Most of the $16 million debt was accumulated before a 2002 agreement forced diplomats to pay the fines or hand over their plates.
Meanwhile, vehicles with US government plates earned 1,400 tickets in fiscal year 2015.
Don’t expect the feds to pay up anytime soon.
“They park wherever the hell they want. The city can’t enforce on a federal vehicle,” said Christian Fama, client-services director for Empire Commercial Services, a Staten Island firm that manages and resolves parking violations for commercial car fleets.



