0 present participle of undercharge
1 to charge someone less than the correct price for something:
Now, all of a sudden, many of them appear to be protesting about undercharging.
If anybody is undercharging, put the snoopers in.
The prime purpose of the system is to allow any undercharging or overcharging of customers to be recovered in the following year.
If that is the case, why do those administrative difficulties always result in overcharging, never in undercharging?
I can understand that a local authority should be penalised for undercharging rents to the extent that its rent account is heavily overdrawn.
It is only the undercharging provision which will—in my view, quite properly—lapse with the deficit grant.
In this context, in my constituency there has been only one complaint about a firm, and that concerned undercharging.
They employ firms to make test purchases to see whether employees are ringing up the right amount of money, or indeed are undercharging to a relative.