Upcharge is used as the billing counterpart to marketing'supsell.[1][2]\\
The term may refer to:
Paying a smaller increment in price for a larger increase in what is received; in another it means paying an increase for a non-standard arrangement,[2] what one writer called "upcharge money."[3]
A convenience fee:[4] a pharmacy that carries basic grocery items and charges higher prices for the non-pharmaceutical one-stop-shopping items.[5] While asurcharge is part of what must be paid, an upcharge is not always unexpected,[6] and usually can be declined by rejecting the additional service or the suggested upgrade, albeit receiving less.[1]
The practice ofamusement parks to charge both for admission and then for individual rides may be described as "Upcharge attraction".[7]
The termupcharge is sometimes used as a synonym forcharge orsurcharge.[8]