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The phrase "a fee equivalent to" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing a payment that matches or corresponds to a certain amount or value.
Example: "The service will incur a fee equivalent to the cost of the materials used."
Alternatives: "a fee matching" or "a fee comparable to".
Exact(16)
Most employers would have to provide coverage to employees or pay a fee equivalent to 8percentt of their payroll.
Household said that even though Mr. Powe's loan documents showed a fee equivalent to 7percentt, he did not pay that much.
Twelve days after opening for business, the entrepreneurs had sent twenty-seven refugees through the tunnel for a fee equivalent to two hundred and fifty dollars per person.
The document, presuming a Confederate victory, promised that, after the war, the vessel's owners would pay the Confederate government a fee equivalent to it and its cargo's assessed value; after the signing, the ship was allowed to sail away.
They object, in particular, to the House Democrats' bill, under which most employers would have to provide coverage or pay a fee equivalent to 8percentt of their payroll.
Under its terms, similar to deals with foreign players from Japan and other countries, the U.S. baseball clubs would pay a fee — equivalent to 25percentt of the player signing bonus — to the federation.
Similar(44)
To pay for maintenance, some pumps cost villagers a monthly fee equivalent to the price of a soft drink, and some people say they are unable or unwilling to pay.
The name of the so-called loophole refers to a feature of the compensation of many fund managers, who frequently receive a management fee equivalent to 2percentt of their fund's assets, as well as 20percentt of the fund's profits (sometimes contingent on reaching a certain profit threshold).
For airtel in Kenya, a service fee equivalent to 10percentt of the amount borrowed is applied to the subscriber for any airtime advanced to him.
In addition to regular dues, Britain faces what ESO director-general Catherine Cesarsky calls an "entrance fee," "equivalent to what they would have paid if they had been building the VLT with us," she says.
"We don't want anyone to feel like a charity case". Instead, Enabled charges companies, typically a one-off fee equivalent to 10% of a person's annual salary.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com