Tottenham are due to announce season-ticket details for the first full campaign at their new stadium on Monday, with supporters hoping for a freeze in prices.

Spurs sold 42,000 of the most expensive season-tickets in the country for their unfinished 62,062-seat new home a year ago, but fans are yet to watch a game there after the project hit delays.

The cheapest season-ticket anywhere in the stadium cost £795 for adults, £595 for young adults – aged 18 to 21 – and £397.50 for seniors and children.

The most expensive were £1,995, while there were also £2,200 tickets with access to a private bar and complimentary food as part of Spurs' '1882' scheme.

The club will finally open the stadium against Crystal Palace or Brighton at the beginning of next month. Since September, season ticket-holders have been refunded, typically on a game-by-game basis, while the team has been playing at Wembley but some have stayed away from the national stadium, amid anger that they have been forced to pay extra for an equivalent seat.

The Tottenham Hotspur Supporters' Trust (THST), who met with the club's board last night, has made it clear they will not support any increase in prices.

"We are making the point very clearly to the Club that, after Season Ticket holders bought tickets for a stadium not yet delivered, had to put in significantly more effort to buy tickets than they normally would, and have been charged match day prices for their seats at Wembley, we will not support any increase in pricing for next season," THST said in its annual newsletter last month.

Spurs have announced that Robbie Keane, Rafa van der Vaart, Darren Anderton, Stephen Car, Allan Nielsen, David Howells, Dimitar Berbatov and Erik Thorstvedt will be among the former stars to compete in a Legends game against Inter Forever – Internazionale's Legends team – in the second test event at the new stadium on March 30. Gary Mabbutt will manage Spurs' team, with Jurgen Klinsmann and Jermaine Jenas expected to be among the other players to be announced soon.

Ryan Mason, Spurs former midfielder who was forced to retire from football in February 2018, will be in the dugout for the first test event – an U-18 fixture against Southampton on March 24. Mason has been coaching with Spurs' youth teams since retirement.

Meanwhile, Christian Eriksen's agent has refused to comment on the playmaker's future, amid fresh speculation he is a summer target for returned Real Madrid boss Zinedine Zidane.

Eriksen is stalling on accepting a new contract at Spurs, with his current deal due to have one year left to run in the summer, but Martin Schoots said: "I don't want to add to the speculation around Christian's contract and football future. Christian is only focusing on the football. He has evolved from a world class talent into a world class player."