From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishat a later/future dateat a later/future dateformalFUTURE at some time in the future SYN later The details will be agreed at a later date. → date
Examples from the Corpus
at a later/future date• The total would be capped at a later date.• This is particularly helpful if your school's organisation seeks to register as a charity at a later date.• This means that the sea in which the Bright Angel was deposited flooded the land in the east at a later date.• Or how about a vital organ being removed and the opt-out card being found at a later date?• Peter Novick dismisses the Freudian theory of repression of trauma leading to problems at a later date.• Secondary sources, in contrast, are interpretations of the past produced at a later date.• Some firms are very flexible on this issue and where possible, allow them to relocate at a later date.• They feared further repercussions at a later date because their participation in the boycott would almost certainly go into their files.