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Fee

A fee is the price one pays as remuneration for rights or services. Fees usually allow for overhead, wages, costs, and markup. Traditionally, professionals in the United Kingdom (and previously the Republic of Ireland) receive a fee in contradistinction to a payment, salary, or wage, and often use guineas rather than pounds as units of account. Under the feudal system, a Knight's fee was what was given to a knight for his service, usually the usage of land. A contingent fee is an attorney's fee which is reduced or not charged at all if the court case is lost by the attorney.

Fee slips for a university college.

A service fee, service charge, or surcharge is a fee added to a customer's bill. The purpose of a service charge often depends on the nature of the product and corresponding service provided. Examples of why this fee is charged are: travel time expenses, truck rental fees, liability and workers' compensation insurance fees, and planning fees. UPS and FedEx have recently begun surcharges for fuel.

Restaurants and banquet halls charging service charges in lieu of tips must distribute them to their wait staff in some US states (e.g., Massachusetts, New York, Montana), but in the state of Kentucky may keep them. A fee may be a flat fee or a variable one, or part of a two-part tariff. A membership fee is charged as part of a subscription business model.

Telecom edit

For telecommunications services such as high-speed Internet and mobile phones, an activation fee is commonly assessed, although most companies fail to include it in the advertised price, resulting in customer missperception on assessment and validity of the fees. An activation fee is prevalent throughout the cellphone industry and is generally assessed to cover costs of line activations and enhancements to networks.

Another fee is the early-termination fee applied nearly universally to cellphone contracts, supposedly to cover the remaining part of the subsidy that the provider prices the phones with. If the user terminates before the end of the term, he or she will be charged, often well over $100. In the U.S., mobile phone companies have come under heavy criticism for this anti-competitive practice, and the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is considering limits to prevent price gouging, such as requiring the fees to be prorated.

Many cable TV and telephone companies, including AT&T, include a regulatory-cost recovery fee in the bill each month of around $3, passing the blame onto government regulation, and essentially charging their customers for complying with U.S. law.

Banking edit

Bank fees are assessed to customers for various services and as penalties. There are unauthorised overdraft fees, ATM usage fees, and fees for having an account balance below the minimum daily balance. Some banks charge a fee for using tellers in an effort to encourage customers to use automated services instead.[1] The fees have come in for criticism as excessive from consumer advocates. They have also targeted bank practices that maximize the assessment of fees and fees that can add up to many times the amount of small transactions.

U.S. banks extract fees from automatic teller machine (ATM) transactions that are made at rival banks, even if the customer's home bank has no branch in a particular area (such as when the customer is on vacation). Customers are sometimes charged twice, both by the bank that owns the ATM, and again by their bank. Bank of America charges a denial fee, literally a fee for refusing service to the customer (if there are insufficient funds or a daily limit), and a fee to simply check the account balance at a "foreign" (other banks') ATMs.[citation needed]

Following the financial crisis of 2007–2008 and legislation passed by Congress, banks modified many credit card agreements with customers.

Renting edit

Like an activation fee, a setup fee is often charged by places that rent space or other things. In the case of self-storage businesses, this negates claims of "only one dollar for the first month" made by Public Storage and others. Apartment complexes often charge fees for pets (mainly dogs and cats). Some complexes euphemistically call these a non-refundable deposit, ignoring the definition of a deposit as inherently being refundable.

Real estate edit

A title company or attorney collects a variety of fees in the course of handling the purchase of a house at a closing. These may include fees for tax service, flood certification, underwriting, appraisal, credit report, record deed, record deed trust, loan signing and processing.

Event tickets edit

With respect to events tickets, online reservations and payments, and other transactions, there is sometimes a service charge (often called a convenience fee) that serves as additional compensation for the company facilitating the transaction. Ticketmaster and others charge this, and have made a business model of it. However, such groups have a monopoly on particular events or even entire concert venues.

Air travel edit

Airlines have long charged fees for changing flights, and for excess luggage. However, with the oil price increases since 2003, many are increasing fees. In May 2008, it was announced that some would be charging even for just one checked bag, making it nearly impossible to avoid. Airlines have also invented fees for nearly every "service" that has always previously been included in the ticket price. While the extra income may be necessary to prevent bankruptcy, the practice of not including mandatory fees in the stated price is deceptive.

Airports also charge landing fees to airlines in order to cover costs, particularly airport security.

Customer service edit

Some businesses charge fees just for talking to a customer service representative. DirecTV charges this when ordering a pay-per-view movie via telephone instead of through the set-top box. Some companies charge for technical support, either prepaid or by using a premium-rate telephone number (such as the 1–900 numbers in North America). In the 2000s (decade), some banks in the U.S. began charging a fee just to visit a teller, prompting such customer anger that the banks were forced to back down.[citation needed]

Speaking edit

A speaking fee is a payment awarded to an individual for speaking at a public event.

Late fees edit

Late fees are charged when payment is not received by a deadline. These are supposedly intended to get people to pay rent or other charges on time, but these are sometimes exorbitant, or extremely out of proportion to the amount of money which is late. They can also add insult to injury for people who have hit hard financial times, making their situation worse. When added to credit card bills or check card statements, it may also cause an overlimit or NSF fee, creating an endless and inescapable cycle of fees that trigger other fees for people already stretched to their financial limit.

Retail edit

Some retail stores add fees, mainly for "guest passes" at membership warehouses like Costco and Sam's Club, where membership dues have not been paid.

There are a few other "cost-plus" stores, however, that add about ten percent at checkout, using the lower shelf price to trick consumers into erroneous comparison shopping. At Food Depot and other smaller low-end chain stores like this, the shelf price may be $1.95, when the shopper will actually be charged $2.15 in the end, in a sort of legalized bait and switch. (Furthermore, a disclaimer indicates the shelf price is not even the actual cost to the store.)

Early termination edit

An early-termination fee is charged by a company when a customer wants or needs to be released from a contract before it expires. One example is when a renter leaves an apartment before a year-long contract is over. If tenants rent for a shorter period, or month-to-month, they are instead charged significantly more per month, and are often denied any promotional deals. Mobile phone companies in the U.S. are notorious for huge early-termination fees, typically starting at $175, and falling by only a few dollars per month, no matter the actual cost of or subsidy to the phone.

Some mortgage companies also charge early payment penalties if the homeowner pays more than is due in order to reduce the interest owed and to shorten the remaining term of the loan. The fees typically negate this advantage at least in part.

There are also fees charged for any type of termination even if the contract was expired. In the suburban Atlanta county of Gwinnett for example, customers were hit with termination fees of over $23 when the county commission chose not to renew the contracts of the county trash collectors in November 2008. The two companies charged this both in violation of county law and in breach of contract.

Infrastructure and environment edit

An impact fee is a charge which a developer must pay to local government, in order to raise money for capital improvements to roads, libraries, and other services upon which the new land development places a burden. This prevents existing residents from being forced to pay in taxes, in addition to already having to put-up with the traffic, noise, and environmental damage of the new development.

Government edit

In government, the difference between a fee and a tax is that a fee is paid for specific goods or services rendered by the government, while a tax has no connection to the benefits received for an individual.[2]

Public resources edit

A user fee is a fee paid for the use of a public resource, like a park. This is most common for national parks, and often also state parks or provincial parks, and for privately owned areas.

Licenses and permits edit

Fees are usually charged for various government services, including license plates and annual motor vehicle registration, as well as driver licenses and professional licensing. Fees are also charged for various permits, like demolition and building permits, rezoning, and land grading (which causes silt); and sometimes for increasing stormwater runoff, destroying native vegetation, and cutting-down healthy trees.

Deceptive use edit

Sometimes fee is used to mask what are actually penalties or taxes. For example, Virginia's now-repealed Civil Remedial Fees were actually a tax on drivers with certain kinds of traffic law violations[citation needed].

Schooling edit

At public universities and community colleges, students are charged tuition and matriculation, when can themselves be considered fees charged per credit hour. However, the term student fees typically refers to additional charges which the student is required to pay, typically no matter how many hours the student is taking in the academic term.

Commonly this is a student activity fee, which helps to fund student organisations, particularly those which are academic in nature; and those which serve all students equally, like student government and student media. A newer fee is the technology fee, which is often charged to students by schools when state government funding fails to meet needs for computers and other classroom technology. Students may also be charged a health fee which usually covers the campus nurse, and possibly a visit to a local clinic if the student is ill.

Parking fees are normally optional, because students may not have their own automobiles. However, many U.S. schools are now forcing meal plans on their students, particularly those that stay in dorms, and some force freshmen to stay in the dorms. Generally, all fees except parking are covered under scholarships, whether they are from private, government, or lottery funds. However, at least one U.S. state (Georgia) began denying HOPE Scholarship money for any new fees added, even by its own state schools.

Services Charge in Singapore, Taiwan and Hong Kong edit

Services Charge is a type of consumer and additional add-on fee and charge which is in place in Singapore, Taiwan and Hong Kong restaurants and food outlets to cover the cost of the primary services and all staff costs. The services charge in these territories is 10 per cent. Services fee and charge is collected by the private company restaurant and is not a government tax.

Legal Requirement edit

It is legal to charge Services Charges in restaurant and food outlets under Singapore, Taiwan and Hong Kong laws. However, restaurants and food outlets in these territories must legally disclose the charge/fee to customers who dine at the venue. Refusing or declining to disclose to customers an additional services charge is illegal under consumer law. Restaurants could face heavy fines or a warning.

Circumstances edit

In normal circumstances in other countries the services fee charges of 10% is included in the price of the meal. The disadvantage is that this can create misunderstanding and confusion for some people. In the United States of America, restaurant add on services charge is optional, because it has a tipping system. When the customer tips the restaurant it become a form of services fee.

Australia edit

In Australia the restaurant and food outlet services charge add on is included in the price of the food meals. However some restaurants and food outlets make additional services charges on public holiday and Sundays, known as public holidays surcharge. The public holiday surcharge in Australia can range from 10% to 15% to cover the cost of staff working on holidays or weekends.

Hidden fees edit

Hidden fees, surprise fees or junk fees are fees that are not mentioned until payment is required, or only mentioned in small print. Examples include resort fees. These are illegal in some countries.[3][4]

References edit

  1. ^ Meier, Barry (27 April 1995). "Need a Teller? A Big Bank Plans $3 Fee". The New York Times. from the original on 30 March 2008. Retrieved 2 May 2010.
  2. ^ Taxes versus fees October 8, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Plautz, Jessica (December 24, 2014). "Travel watchdog warns vacationers about resort fees hidden in the small print". Mashable. from the original on November 29, 2020. Retrieved May 22, 2016.
  4. ^ Calder, Simon (March 23, 2018). "Trump Brings Illegal US-Style 'Resort Fees' to UK For First Time". The Independent. from the original on May 14, 2018. Retrieved May 13, 2018.

other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, art. For other uses see Fee disambiguation This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Fee news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message The examples and perspective in this article deal primarily with the United States and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this article discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new article as appropriate March 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message A fee is the price one pays as remuneration for rights or services Fees usually allow for overhead wages costs and markup Traditionally professionals in the United Kingdom and previously the Republic of Ireland receive a fee in contradistinction to a payment salary or wage and often use guineas rather than pounds as units of account Under the feudal system a Knight s fee was what was given to a knight for his service usually the usage of land A contingent fee is an attorney s fee which is reduced or not charged at all if the court case is lost by the attorney Fee slips for a university college A service fee service charge or surcharge is a fee added to a customer s bill The purpose of a service charge often depends on the nature of the product and corresponding service provided Examples of why this fee is charged are travel time expenses truck rental fees liability and workers compensation insurance fees and planning fees UPS and FedEx have recently begun surcharges for fuel Restaurants and banquet halls charging service charges in lieu of tips must distribute them to their wait staff in some US states e g Massachusetts New York Montana but in the state of Kentucky may keep them A fee may be a flat fee or a variable one or part of a two part tariff A membership fee is charged as part of a subscription business model Contents 1 Telecom 2 Banking 3 Renting 4 Real estate 5 Event tickets 6 Air travel 7 Customer service 8 Speaking 9 Late fees 10 Retail 11 Early termination 12 Infrastructure and environment 13 Government 13 1 Public resources 13 2 Licenses and permits 13 3 Deceptive use 14 Schooling 15 Services Charge in Singapore Taiwan and Hong Kong 15 1 Legal Requirement 15 2 Circumstances 15 2 1 Australia 16 Hidden fees 17 ReferencesTelecom editFor telecommunications services such as high speed Internet and mobile phones an activation fee is commonly assessed although most companies fail to include it in the advertised price resulting in customer missperception on assessment and validity of the fees An activation fee is prevalent throughout the cellphone industry and is generally assessed to cover costs of line activations and enhancements to networks Another fee is the early termination fee applied nearly universally to cellphone contracts supposedly to cover the remaining part of the subsidy that the provider prices the phones with If the user terminates before the end of the term he or she will be charged often well over 100 In the U S mobile phone companies have come under heavy criticism for this anti competitive practice and the Federal Communications Commission FCC is considering limits to prevent price gouging such as requiring the fees to be prorated Many cable TV and telephone companies including AT amp T include a regulatory cost recovery fee in the bill each month of around 3 passing the blame onto government regulation and essentially charging their customers for complying with U S law Banking editFor further information see Bank charge For credit card interchange fees see Interchange fee For other credit card fees see Credit card fee Bank fees are assessed to customers for various services and as penalties There are unauthorised overdraft fees ATM usage fees and fees for having an account balance below the minimum daily balance Some banks charge a fee for using tellers in an effort to encourage customers to use automated services instead 1 The fees have come in for criticism as excessive from consumer advocates They have also targeted bank practices that maximize the assessment of fees and fees that can add up to many times the amount of small transactions U S banks extract fees from automatic teller machine ATM transactions that are made at rival banks even if the customer s home bank has no branch in a particular area such as when the customer is on vacation Customers are sometimes charged twice both by the bank that owns the ATM and again by their bank Bank of America charges a denial fee literally a fee for refusing service to the customer if there are insufficient funds or a daily limit and a fee to simply check the account balance at a foreign other banks ATMs citation needed Following the financial crisis of 2007 2008 and legislation passed by Congress banks modified many credit card agreements with customers Renting editLike an activation fee a setup fee is often charged by places that rent space or other things In the case of self storage businesses this negates claims of only one dollar for the first month made by Public Storage and others Apartment complexes often charge fees for pets mainly dogs and cats Some complexes euphemistically call these a non refundable deposit ignoring the definition of a deposit as inherently being refundable Real estate editMain article Closing cost A title company or attorney collects a variety of fees in the course of handling the purchase of a house at a closing These may include fees for tax service flood certification underwriting appraisal credit report record deed record deed trust loan signing and processing Event tickets editWith respect to events tickets online reservations and payments and other transactions there is sometimes a service charge often called a convenience fee that serves as additional compensation for the company facilitating the transaction Ticketmaster and others charge this and have made a business model of it However such groups have a monopoly on particular events or even entire concert venues Air travel editAirlines have long charged fees for changing flights and for excess luggage However with the oil price increases since 2003 many are increasing fees In May 2008 it was announced that some would be charging even for just one checked bag making it nearly impossible to avoid Airlines have also invented fees for nearly every service that has always previously been included in the ticket price While the extra income may be necessary to prevent bankruptcy the practice of not including mandatory fees in the stated price is deceptive Airports also charge landing fees to airlines in order to cover costs particularly airport security Customer service editSome businesses charge fees just for talking to a customer service representative DirecTV charges this when ordering a pay per view movie via telephone instead of through the set top box Some companies charge for technical support either prepaid or by using a premium rate telephone number such as the 1 900 numbers in North America In the 2000s decade some banks in the U S began charging a fee just to visit a teller prompting such customer anger that the banks were forced to back down citation needed Speaking editMain article Speaking fee A speaking fee is a payment awarded to an individual for speaking at a public event Late fees editMain article Late fee Late fees are charged when payment is not received by a deadline These are supposedly intended to get people to pay rent or other charges on time but these are sometimes exorbitant or extremely out of proportion to the amount of money which is late They can also add insult to injury for people who have hit hard financial times making their situation worse When added to credit card bills or check card statements it may also cause an overlimit or NSF fee creating an endless and inescapable cycle of fees that trigger other fees for people already stretched to their financial limit Retail editSome retail stores add fees mainly for guest passes at membership warehouses like Costco and Sam s Club where membership dues have not been paid There are a few other cost plus stores however that add about ten percent at checkout using the lower shelf price to trick consumers into erroneous comparison shopping At Food Depot and other smaller low end chain stores like this the shelf price may be 1 95 when the shopper will actually be charged 2 15 in the end in a sort of legalized bait and switch Furthermore a disclaimer indicates the shelf price is not even the actual cost to the store Early termination editAn early termination fee is charged by a company when a customer wants or needs to be released from a contract before it expires One example is when a renter leaves an apartment before a year long contract is over If tenants rent for a shorter period or month to month they are instead charged significantly more per month and are often denied any promotional deals Mobile phone companies in the U S are notorious for huge early termination fees typically starting at 175 and falling by only a few dollars per month no matter the actual cost of or subsidy to the phone Some mortgage companies also charge early payment penalties if the homeowner pays more than is due in order to reduce the interest owed and to shorten the remaining term of the loan The fees typically negate this advantage at least in part There are also fees charged for any type of termination even if the contract was expired In the suburban Atlanta county of Gwinnett for example customers were hit with termination fees of over 23 when the county commission chose not to renew the contracts of the county trash collectors in November 2008 The two companies charged this both in violation of county law and in breach of contract Infrastructure and environment editAn impact fee is a charge which a developer must pay to local government in order to raise money for capital improvements to roads libraries and other services upon which the new land development places a burden This prevents existing residents from being forced to pay in taxes in addition to already having to put up with the traffic noise and environmental damage of the new development Government editIn government the difference between a fee and a tax is that a fee is paid for specific goods or services rendered by the government while a tax has no connection to the benefits received for an individual 2 Public resources edit A user fee is a fee paid for the use of a public resource like a park This is most common for national parks and often also state parks or provincial parks and for privately owned areas Licenses and permits edit Fees are usually charged for various government services including license plates and annual motor vehicle registration as well as driver licenses and professional licensing Fees are also charged for various permits like demolition and building permits rezoning and land grading which causes silt and sometimes for increasing stormwater runoff destroying native vegetation and cutting down healthy trees Deceptive use edit Sometimes fee is used to mask what are actually penalties or taxes For example Virginia s now repealed Civil Remedial Fees were actually a tax on drivers with certain kinds of traffic law violations citation needed Schooling editAt public universities and community colleges students are charged tuition and matriculation when can themselves be considered fees charged per credit hour However the term student fees typically refers to additional charges which the student is required to pay typically no matter how many hours the student is taking in the academic term Commonly this is a student activity fee which helps to fund student organisations particularly those which are academic in nature and those which serve all students equally like student government and student media A newer fee is the technology fee which is often charged to students by schools when state government funding fails to meet needs for computers and other classroom technology Students may also be charged a health fee which usually covers the campus nurse and possibly a visit to a local clinic if the student is ill Parking fees are normally optional because students may not have their own automobiles However many U S schools are now forcing meal plans on their students particularly those that stay in dorms and some force freshmen to stay in the dorms Generally all fees except parking are covered under scholarships whether they are from private government or lottery funds However at least one U S state Georgia began denying HOPE Scholarship money for any new fees added even by its own state schools Services Charge in Singapore Taiwan and Hong Kong editServices Charge is a type of consumer and additional add on fee and charge which is in place in Singapore Taiwan and Hong Kong restaurants and food outlets to cover the cost of the primary services and all staff costs The services charge in these territories is 10 per cent Services fee and charge is collected by the private company restaurant and is not a government tax Legal Requirement edit It is legal to charge Services Charges in restaurant and food outlets under Singapore Taiwan and Hong Kong laws However restaurants and food outlets in these territories must legally disclose the charge fee to customers who dine at the venue Refusing or declining to disclose to customers an additional services charge is illegal under consumer law Restaurants could face heavy fines or a warning Circumstances edit In normal circumstances in other countries the services fee charges of 10 is included in the price of the meal The disadvantage is that this can create misunderstanding and confusion for some people In the United States of America restaurant add on services charge is optional because it has a tipping system When the customer tips the restaurant it become a form of services fee Australia edit In Australia the restaurant and food outlet services charge add on is included in the price of the food meals However some restaurants and food outlets make additional services charges on public holiday and Sundays known as public holidays surcharge The public holiday surcharge in Australia can range from 10 to 15 to cover the cost of staff working on holidays or weekends Hidden fees editHidden fees surprise fees or junk fees are fees that are not mentioned until payment is required or only mentioned in small print Examples include resort fees These are illegal in some countries 3 4 References edit Meier Barry 27 April 1995 Need a Teller A Big Bank Plans 3 Fee The New York Times Archived from the original on 30 March 2008 Retrieved 2 May 2010 Taxes versus fees Archived October 8 2012 at the Wayback Machine Plautz Jessica December 24 2014 Travel watchdog warns vacationers about resort fees hidden in the small print Mashable Archived from the original on November 29 2020 Retrieved May 22 2016 Calder Simon March 23 2018 Trump Brings Illegal US Style Resort Fees to UK For First Time The Independent Archived from the original on May 14 2018 Retrieved May 13 2018 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fee amp oldid 1168896163, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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