0 to charge someone less than the correct price for something: --
1 to ask someone to pay less than the real price or value of a product or service: --
Inspectors don't fail stores for undercharging customers, but it's still a problem.
The investigation found that some supermarkets were undercharging.
2 a request for payment that is less than the real price or value of a product or service: --
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.
Therefore, it sought to undercharge this firm.
I gave my answer, but it is extremely difficult in practice to identify as income that portion of the price which is undercharged on the transfer of the stock.
The bank's immediate response was to say that its own review of the account showed not an overcharge, but an undercharge of £650.
It is only the undercharging provision which will—in my view, quite properly—lapse with the deficit grant.
They tell us that there was an error in their previous price lists which led to some customers being undercharged.
I can understand that a local authority should be penalised for undercharging rents to the extent that its rent account is heavily overdrawn.
If that is the case, why do those administrative difficulties always result in overcharging, never in undercharging?