50
Mixed
unknown
The text explains how the fee being paid by either the payer or the beneficiary affects the amount the beneficiary receives from a transfer.
The claims regarding how transfer fees affect what the beneficiary receives are standard practices in financial transactions. Without specific evidence or professional fact-checks found, these claims are considered generally accurate based on common financial principles. Therefore, both claims are plausible but unverified with external evidence.
Individual Claims
50
Mixed
Financial
If the fee is paid by the payer, the beneficiary receives the full transfer amount.
No external evidence found to verify or refute this claim. However, by standard financial transaction practices, if the payer covers the transaction fee, the beneficiary would typically receive the full amount.
Fact Check Score
None
Fact Check Weight
0
Web Consensus Score
None
Web Consensus Weight
0
Source Quality Score
None
Source Quality Weight
0
Llm Reasoning Score
50
Llm Reasoning Weight
100
Weighted Total
50
Evidence Summary
None
50
Mixed
Financial
If the fee is not paid by the payer, the beneficiary receives the transfer amount minus the fee.
No external evidence found to verify or refute this claim. This aligns with general financial transaction protocols, where the beneficiary would typically receive the net amount after fees if the payer does not cover them.
Fact Check Score
None
Fact Check Weight
0
Web Consensus Score
None
Web Consensus Weight
0
Source Quality Score
None
Source Quality Weight
0
Llm Reasoning Score
50
Llm Reasoning Weight
100
Weighted Total
50
Evidence Summary
None