The figures come from a report published by UEFA with the evidence suggesting good news for the north London side.
According to football finance expert Kieran Maguire, Spurs earn £4.8million on a matchday - a figure that includes gate revenue and money spent by fans on items such as food, drink, matchday programmes and club merchandise.
The figure also includes the deducted costs of hosting the match, meaning that figure is pure profit.
Tottenham top the list of Premier League sides, but are third on the overall ranking, with north London rivals Arsenal in fifth with £4.2million, while Manchester United and Liverpool sit in seventh and eighth.
The only sides in Europe ahead of Spurs in terms of matchday revenue are Barcelona and Paris Saint-Germain, who earn £6.5million and £5.6million respectively per home match.
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Elsewhere Bayern Munich sit in fourth spot on the list, with Real Madrid in sixth.
It was revealed by Deloitte last month that Tottenham are now London's richest football team, moving ahead of both Arsenal and Chelsea who were previously ahead of them.
The upturn in financial fortunes has come since moving into their state-of-the-art 62,850-seater stadium in 2019, which has become a benchmark of elite-level sporting hospitality in the years since.
This has included hosting NFL fixtures such as last year's Jaguars vs Bills clash, boxing matches featuring Anthony Joshua and Tyson Fury as well as numerous high-profile concerts featuring Beyonce, Lady Gaga and Red Hot Chili Peppers.
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Tottenham will be hoping that they can secure Champions League football for the 2024/25 campaign to boost their coffers yet further.
As it stands, Ange Postecoglou's side find themselves in the top four and on track to do exactly that - however, with Aston Villa and Manchester United breathing down their necks, there is still work to do.
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