Antonio Conte's men will don the new shirt when they kick off the Premier League season in August and during the club's return to the Champions League.
The Nike jersey contains a splash of yellow around the collar and the cuffs of the sleeve, on a plain white background.
meanwhile, the AIA sponsor logo continues to be in red despite some Spurs fans' resistance to the club being associated with the colour of bitter north London rivals Arsenal.
Spurs posted a video promoting the shirt's release via the club's Twitter account on Wednesday morning, sparking a mixed reaction from fans.
Tottenham stars Heung-Min Son, Harry Kane, Eric Dier, Dejan Kulusevski, and Cristian Romero all feature, along with women's team captain Shelina Zadorsky, Jessica Naz and Ashleigh Neviller.
Meanwhile, the club also paid a classy tribute to legendary striker Jimmy Greaves who died in September 2021, while former captain Ledley King made a cameo role in the video's outro.
Spurs also popped a cheeky easter egg into the announcement video - and it shows the ambition the club have right now.
In the clip, two fans are seen sitting in a park with one reading a travel guide for Istanbul - the Turkish city which will hold the Champions League final next season.
Given the theme around the announcement is the club motto 'To dare is to do', it's understandable they're dreaming about repeating their historic run to the competition's final in 2019.
Tottenham will find out who their first Premier League opponents will be in the new shirt when the 2022/23 fixtures are announced on June 16.
The Premier League will kick off a week earlier than usual next season due to the rescheduling of the calendar owing to the World Cup in Qatar this winter.
Spurs will be hoping to get off to a good start just as they did last season, beating champions Manchester City 1-0 on the opening day.
They went on to win their following two league games against Wolves and Watford by the same score line before the wheels started to fall off for the then coach Nuno Espírito Santo.
Conte's arrival in November sparked an inspired comeback for the club, culminating in Champions League qualification at Arsenal's expense.