outlay
noun /ˈaʊtleɪ/
/ˈaʊtleɪ/
[countable, uncountable]- outlay (on something) the money that you have to spend in order to start a new project
- The business quickly repaid the initial outlay on advertising.
- a massive financial/capital outlay
Synonyms costscosts- spending
- expenditure
- expenses
- overheads
- outlay
- costs the total amount of money that needs to be spent by a business:
- labour/production costs
- rising costs
- spending the amount of money that is spent, especially by a government or an organization:
- public spending
- More spending on health was promised.
- expenditure (rather formal) an amount of money spent by a government, an organization or a person:
- expenditure on education
- expenses money that has to be spent by a person or an organization; money that you spend while you are working that your employer will pay back to you later:
- legal expenses
- travel expenses
- overhead(s) the regular costs of running a business or an organization, such as rent, electricity and wages:
- High overheads mean small profit margins.
- outlay the money that you have to spend in order to start a new business or project, or in order to save yourself money or time later:
- The best equipment is costly but is well worth the outlay.
- spending/expenditure/outlay on something
- high/low costs/spending/expenditure/expenses/overheads
- total costs/spending/expenditure/expenses/overheads/outlay
- capital costs/spending/expenditure/expenses/outlay
- household costs/spending/expenditure/expenses
- government/public/education/health costs/spending/expenditure
- to increase/reduce costs/spending/expenditure/expenses/overheads/the outlay
Extra ExamplesTopics Businessc2- The project would require little financial outlay.
- The railway had made a considerable capital outlay on new rolling stock.
- The best equipment is costly but is well worth the outlay.
Oxford Collocations Dictionaryadjective- considerable
- huge
- large
- …
- make
- require
- recoup
- …
- outlay on