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  1. used about money that you have to spend yourself rather than having it paid for you, for example by your employer or insurance company: All out-of-pocket expenses will be reimbursed by the company. Under the new scheme, there are no out-of-pocket costs for preventative medical care. Compare. in pocket UK.

  2. out of pocket. idiom. mainly UK. having less money than you started with after an activity involving money: I am thousands of pounds out of pocket. The last time I went out with you, I ended up seriously out of pocket!

  3. 24 de jan. de 2024 · It can refer to a person having to pay money themselves, a person being unreachable, or a person acting unnaturally or in a wild, inappropriate way. When talking about money, a person who is paying out of pocket is making a payment with their own money.

  4. 5 de fev. de 2023 · An out-of-pocket expense is a payment you make with your own money that may be reimbursed later by an employer. Work-related out-of-pocket expenses are usually reimbursed by the employer.

  5. using your own money to pay for something, rather than using money given or lent by your employer, an insurance company, etc.: 78% of Iowans don't have a drug prescription benefit and pay all costs out of pocket. Insurance wouldn't cover him until he spent $15,000 out of pocket.

  6. out of pocket. frase. If you are out of pocket, you have less money than you should have or than you intended, for example because you have spent too much or because of a mistake . Card fraud causes huge inconvenience and the experience can often leave you out of pocket.

  7. out of pocket, out-of-pocket adj. (expenses: paid by individual) do próprio bolso expres. Nota: A hyphen is used when the adjective precedes the noun. out of pocket adj. UK (having made a loss, short of money) de bolsos vazios loc adj. By the time I'd paid for all the repairs, I was seriously out of pocket.