Tottenham have confirmed Nike will be the club's new shirt manufacturer from the start of the 2017/18 season.

Spurs have agreed a 'multi-year agreement' with the sportswear giant which will coincide with the club's move to a new 61,559-seat stadium on the site of their former White Hart Lane home.

Tottenham will also wear Nike kits during the forthcoming season at Wembley while construction work on the new ground is complete.

Club chairman Daniel Levy said: "We are delighted to be partnering with Nike, one of the world's leading brands.

"Nike is committed to partnering with us both at home, at a time when our new stadium scheme is the catalyst for the regenration of Tottenham, and globally, with our growing fan base mirrored by Nike's worldwide reach."

The deal is thought to be worth £25million-a-year and will cover the men’s, women’s and academy squads; Coaching staff and Tottenham Hotspur Foundation representatives will also be kitted out in Nike gear.

Spurs are the second London club to team up with Nike after the Blues cut short a deal with Adidas to sign a mammoth £60m-a-year deal which will also be in place from the 2017/18 campaign.

Top Ten Tottenham Kits 10 show all Top Ten Tottenham Kits 1/10 The Beginning 1898-1903



This picture may be grainy, the players faces unknown to many, but this is the Tottenham Hotspur squad of 1898.



16 years after the formation of Hotspur football club, and 14 years after the change to the name they carry to this day, 1898 was the first year the team donned their famous white jerseys, thus changing history forever.



For this reason alone, the kit makes our selection. 2/10 Collared classic 1957-1959



Ron Henry is pictured wearing this crisp, white v-neck, cockerel emblazoned shirt. 3/10 Euro Spurs 1962-1966



Jimmy Greaves would arrive at White Hart Lane in time for the 1962 campaign, and the club added white shorts to its classic double-era V-neck for the European Cup campaign, before elimination at the hands of Eusebio's Benfica at the semi-final stage.



They would not return to Europe's premier competition until the 2010-11 season.



The following year, in the same kit, they would beat Atletico Madrid 5-1 in the final of the European Cup Winners' Cup, becoming the first British club to win a continental trophy.



Greaves would score twice in the final. 4/10 Inaugural Champions 1966-1977



Another legendary kit. This one worn by Tottenham's 1967 FA Cup winners, 1971 and 1973 League Cup winners and 1972 UEFA Cup winners - the first year of the Cup's existence.



The 1973 League Cup triumph over Norwich City, courtesy of Ralph Coates' goal, was the first time Spurs wore a manufacturer's emblem on a strip: Umbro. 5/10 Holsten Hotspur 1983-1985



Spurs led the way in 80s kit fashion, especially with their shadow stripe kit. The conventional version between 1983 and 1985 had the Tottenham badge in the centre of the chest, and the club wore this slightly changed version for the 1984 UEFA Cup final.



This kit was also the first to carry a sponsor: Holsten. The brewery would continue to sponsor Tottenham's kits until 1995, before returning for three years between 1999 and 2002 when fellow German company Adidas were Spurs' kit manufacturers. 6/10 Ardiles & El Diego 1985-1987



Perhaps the closest resemblance to the sash strip, and the first of a legendary trio: Tottenham, Holsten and Hummel.



Worn by greats Ossie Ardiles, Glenn Hoddle, Gary Mabbutt, Clive Allen and Chris Waddle, Spurs may not have lifted silverware in this period of their history, but, is Ardiles' testimonial, a certain Diego Maradona did wear the white shirt of Tottenham Hotspur.



Enough said. 7/10 Gazza's Goal 1989-1991



Another Hummel-Holsten number.



Spurs may not have worn this shirt when winning the 1991 FA Cup against Brian Clough's Nottingham Forest, but did so for perhaps the club's most famous goal: Paul Gascoigne's free-kick at Wembley in the semi-final victory over Arsenal. 8/10 Jurgen The German 1993-1995



Again, no trophy success, but another star name.



This Umbro-Holsten number was worn by the side when Ossie Ardiles returned to White Hart Lane to succeed Doug Livermore and Ray Clemence to manage the club, and a certain German, Jurgen Klinsmann, arrived. 9/10 Harry Hotspur 2010-2011



Puma had created three questionable strips in the four years previous but this, retro inspired number, was worn for Tottenham's return to Europe's premier club competition under Harry Redknapp.



The likes of Rafa van der Vaart, Ledley King, Luka Modric and Gareth Bale would wear this through to the quarter-finals of the Champions League, including one of the club's most memorable occasions in their recent history: the 3-1 triumph at White Hart Lane over then reigning champions, Inter Milan. 10/10 End Of An Era 2013-2014



Under Armour's second attempt at a Tottenham kit may not have inspired the team to success, but their performances in it should not detract from its traditional swagger.



It would prove to be the last Spurs kit worn by Gareth Bale, during a pre-season friendly against Swindon Town - in which he would score his last goal for the club, on his 23rd birthday - before making his world-record £86 million move to Real Madrid. 1/10 The Beginning 1898-1903



This picture may be grainy, the players faces unknown to many, but this is the Tottenham Hotspur squad of 1898.



16 years after the formation of Hotspur football club, and 14 years after the change to the name they carry to this day, 1898 was the first year the team donned their famous white jerseys, thus changing history forever.



For this reason alone, the kit makes our selection. 2/10 Collared classic 1957-1959



Ron Henry is pictured wearing this crisp, white v-neck, cockerel emblazoned shirt. 3/10 Euro Spurs 1962-1966



Jimmy Greaves would arrive at White Hart Lane in time for the 1962 campaign, and the club added white shorts to its classic double-era V-neck for the European Cup campaign, before elimination at the hands of Eusebio's Benfica at the semi-final stage.



They would not return to Europe's premier competition until the 2010-11 season.



The following year, in the same kit, they would beat Atletico Madrid 5-1 in the final of the European Cup Winners' Cup, becoming the first British club to win a continental trophy.



Greaves would score twice in the final. 4/10 Inaugural Champions 1966-1977



Another legendary kit. This one worn by Tottenham's 1967 FA Cup winners, 1971 and 1973 League Cup winners and 1972 UEFA Cup winners - the first year of the Cup's existence.



The 1973 League Cup triumph over Norwich City, courtesy of Ralph Coates' goal, was the first time Spurs wore a manufacturer's emblem on a strip: Umbro. 5/10 Holsten Hotspur 1983-1985



Spurs led the way in 80s kit fashion, especially with their shadow stripe kit. The conventional version between 1983 and 1985 had the Tottenham badge in the centre of the chest, and the club wore this slightly changed version for the 1984 UEFA Cup final.



This kit was also the first to carry a sponsor: Holsten. The brewery would continue to sponsor Tottenham's kits until 1995, before returning for three years between 1999 and 2002 when fellow German company Adidas were Spurs' kit manufacturers. 6/10 Ardiles & El Diego 1985-1987



Perhaps the closest resemblance to the sash strip, and the first of a legendary trio: Tottenham, Holsten and Hummel.



Worn by greats Ossie Ardiles, Glenn Hoddle, Gary Mabbutt, Clive Allen and Chris Waddle, Spurs may not have lifted silverware in this period of their history, but, is Ardiles' testimonial, a certain Diego Maradona did wear the white shirt of Tottenham Hotspur.



Enough said. 7/10 Gazza's Goal 1989-1991



Another Hummel-Holsten number.



Spurs may not have worn this shirt when winning the 1991 FA Cup against Brian Clough's Nottingham Forest, but did so for perhaps the club's most famous goal: Paul Gascoigne's free-kick at Wembley in the semi-final victory over Arsenal. 8/10 Jurgen The German 1993-1995



Again, no trophy success, but another star name.



This Umbro-Holsten number was worn by the side when Ossie Ardiles returned to White Hart Lane to succeed Doug Livermore and Ray Clemence to manage the club, and a certain German, Jurgen Klinsmann, arrived. 9/10 Harry Hotspur 2010-2011



Puma had created three questionable strips in the four years previous but this, retro inspired number, was worn for Tottenham's return to Europe's premier club competition under Harry Redknapp.



The likes of Rafa van der Vaart, Ledley King, Luka Modric and Gareth Bale would wear this through to the quarter-finals of the Champions League, including one of the club's most memorable occasions in their recent history: the 3-1 triumph at White Hart Lane over then reigning champions, Inter Milan. 10/10 End Of An Era 2013-2014



Under Armour's second attempt at a Tottenham kit may not have inspired the team to success, but their performances in it should not detract from its traditional swagger.



It would prove to be the last Spurs kit worn by Gareth Bale, during a pre-season friendly against Swindon Town - in which he would score his last goal for the club, on his 23rd birthday - before making his world-record £86 million move to Real Madrid.

Under Armour have been in partnership with Spurs since the 2012/13 season.