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Aww, how sweet.

A nightspot operator in northern England eager to keep the peace with noise-weary neighbors has devised a delicious plan to keep patrons quiet as they exit the club during the early morning hours.

They’re passing out lollipops.

“As daft as it sounds, people tend to become quiet when they have something in their mouth,” David Nejrup, operations director at Carousel and Home, two popular haunts in Leeds, told the Yorkshire Evening Post.

The party place was recently approved to serve alcohol well into the wee hours — a move that reportedly had residents of the street on edge.

Neighbors had complained previously about noise and other nuisances — and were worried the switch-up would worsen the issue.

And while other precautions were taken to minimize disturbance, the most unusual part of the plan has drawn significant attention — that customers will now be handed complimentary suckers as they head for the doors.

Turns out, the tasty tactic has been implemented at late-night spots around the world throughout the years.

In one British city more than 20 years ago, ABC News previously reported, local police even paid for 13,000 treats to be handed out as part of a test run.

While it hasn’t yet hit the mainstream in NYC — the number one party town in the US — it would likely be a success as the city has hit a sugar rush.

BonBon, a Swedish confectionery on the Lower East Side that’s open until midnight, has become an unlikely nightlife hot spot. It even has a designated “candy bouncer.”

“Last week, we came here instead of going to the bars,” Katie Miller, 23, told The Post. “It’s a great Saturday night.”

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