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recoupment

Recoupment is the act of recovering money or assets that are due, or offsetting a claim with damages or credits arising from the same transaction. It can apply in legal, financial, or administrative contexts and may involve reclaiming payments made in error, recovering costs, or recouping invested funds from future revenues.

In legal terms, recoupment is a defense or counterclaim that allows a defendant to offset the amount

In administrative and government contexts, recoupment refers to reclaiming funds that were disbursed in error or

In business and finance, recoupment describes recovering invested costs from revenues, often within contract terms. For

Limitations and variations exist across jurisdictions and contexts. The term is sometimes used interchangeably with set-off,

claimed
by
the
plaintiff
with
damages
or
credits
arising
from
the
same
transaction
or
occurrence.
It
is
distinct
from
a
set-off,
which
typically
involves
independent
claims
and
may
not
be
tied
to
the
same
underlying
event.
The
availability
and
scope
of
recoupment
depend
on
jurisdiction
and
the
specifics
of
the
dispute.
overpaid,
such
as
tax
refunds,
welfare
benefits,
or
other
subsidies.
Agencies
implement
procedures
to
recover
these
overpayments,
which
may
involve
withholding
future
payments
or
pursuing
repayment.
example,
a
studio
may
have
a
recoupment
clause
requiring
it
to
recover
production
costs
from
earnings
before
profits
are
shared.
In
other
settings,
recoupment
serves
as
a
form
of
cost
recovery
or
offset
against
liabilities.
but
recoupment
generally
refers
to
offsets
linked
to
the
same
transaction,
while
set-off
can
involve
broader
or
unrelated
claims.