Insurance Claim Rejection In India | Pankaj Dubey

Insurance Companies Scam in India
Investigative Report

Insurance Companies in India: Do They Really Help Customers or Just Find Ways to Reject Claims?

By Pankaj Dubey

Millions of Indians pay premiums for years believing insurance will protect them. Then crisis strikes — and instead of support, many get forms, delays, and rejection letters at the worst possible moment.

Think about the last insurance advertisement you saw. A happy family. A devoted father. Reassuring words: “We’re with you.” “Your family’s shield.” Insurance companies spend enormous sums marketing themselves as pillars of support — your guardian angel when life turns difficult.

Now talk to a policyholder who just had a claim rejected.

The contrast between the advertising fantasy and the lived reality of millions of Indian insurance customers is striking, often heartbreaking, and — critics say — not entirely coincidental.

“I paid premiums for 14 years without making a single claim. The one time I needed it — after my father’s bypass surgery — they rejected it citing ‘non-disclosure.’ We had declared everything.” — Consumer forum post, widely shared

Across social media, consumer forums, newspaper columns, and IRDAI complaint registers, a pattern repeats with troubling consistency: customers who paid premiums faithfully for years find themselves navigating a labyrinth of documentation demands, investigation delays, and technical rejections at the exact moment their need is greatest.

This article does not claim all insurance companies are fraudulent or that every rejected claim is wrongful. But the volume and nature of consumer complaints demands an honest, investigative examination.

5.8 Cr+ health insurance claims filed annually in India (approx.)
~15% average claim repudiation rate in the non-life segment
50,000+ complaints registered with IRDAI’s grievance cell in recent years
30–45 days average time insurers take to settle complex health claims

1. The Promise vs the Reality of Insurance

Insurance is sold on emotion — fear, love, duty. The challenge is that the product shown in the advertisement is not always the product described in the policy document.

Indian insurance advertising has grown remarkably sophisticated. Campaigns invoke protecting your family’s future, securing your parents’ old age, and ensuring your children’s dreams survive even your death. These motivations are real — and they work.

But between the emotional TV spot and the fine-print-dense policy document, a trust gap has quietly widened. When customers file claims, many report an experience that feels nothing like the warm support promised in the advertisement.

  • Long document lists — many not mentioned at the time of purchase
  • Queries that seem designed to stall rather than verify
  • Investigations that feel adversarial rather than factual
  • Technical objections raised after years of accepting premiums without issue
  • Rejections citing policy conditions the customer was never clearly explained

The result is a deepening credibility crisis. Customers who have dealt with a claim dispute frequently say they would hesitate to recommend their insurer to family or friends. Trust, once broken in a moment of crisis, is almost impossible to rebuild.


2. Why Customers Say Claims Get Delayed

The Documentation Spiral

Most policyholders report the first document request is just the beginning. Initial submission triggers a request for additional documents. Those are submitted. New queries arise. The cycle continues for weeks or months, each round consuming the policyholder’s time, energy, and often money — at precisely the moment they can least afford it.

Third-Party Administrators (TPAs)

Health insurance claims often pass through a TPA — an intermediary between the policyholder and the insurer. While TPAs exist to streamline processing, consumer complaints frequently cite TPA delays, miscommunication, and lack of accountability as key friction points. When a claim is rejected at the TPA level, many policyholders are uncertain whether to escalate to the insurer or the TPA — a confusion that causes critical timelines to be missed.

Internal Investigations

Insurers have the right to investigate claims — particularly large or complex ones. But consumer complaints suggest some investigations become indefinite: no clear timeline, no regular communication, no explanation of what is being examined. Families waiting for a life insurance claim while managing grief describe this period as among the most painful of their lives.

⚠️ Know your timeline rights IRDAI guidelines require insurers to settle or reject claims within 30 days of receiving all documents — or 90 days if an investigation is needed. Claims stalled beyond these timelines attract interest payable to the customer. If your claim is being delayed, you have regulatory recourse.

3. How Technicalities Are Used Against Policyholders

Perhaps nothing frustrates insurance customers more than having a claim rejected not because the event wasn’t covered — but because of a technicality in form-filling, disclosure, or policy interpretation.

Pre-Existing Disease Disputes

This is, by far, the most common ground for health insurance claim rejection in India. Pre-existing disease (PED) exclusions are legitimate — but their application has become, in the view of many consumer advocates, increasingly broad. Customers report claims rejected for conditions they had no knowledge of at policy purchase — conditions undiagnosed or subclinical at the time, revealed only through the very hospitalisation for which they are now claiming.

Non-Disclosure Allegations

A non-disclosure allegation arises when the insurer claims the policyholder failed to reveal a material fact at purchase. These can be raised years — sometimes a decade — after the policy was issued. The insurer may void the policy entirely, meaning all premiums are forfeited and no claim is payable.

Incorrect Form Filling

Many policyholders who purchased through agents report their proposal forms were filled by the agent on their behalf. Errors in these forms — sometimes introduced by agents who feared full disclosure would cost a sale — later become the basis for claim denial. The policyholder signed a form they didn’t fully understand, and years later that signature is used against them.

Technicality UsedImpact on CustomerRedressal Option
Pre-existing disease (PED)Claim rejected if any prior condition foundOmbudsman, consumer court
Non-disclosureEntire policy voided; all premiums lostIRDAI grievance, civil court
Incorrect proposal formClaim rejected citing mis-statementOmbudsman if agent at fault
Missing documentationClaim held pending indefinitelyIRDAI escalation after 30 days
Policy condition violationPartial or full repudiationConsumer forum / NCDRC

4. Health Insurance Claim Rejections: Where Most Battles Are Fought

Cashless Claim Denials

The “cashless” facility — where the insurer settles the hospital bill directly — is one of the most-marketed features of health insurance in India. But consumers increasingly report that cashless authorisation is declined at the last minute, leaving them to arrange funds urgently and then pursue a reimbursement claim that may itself take months.

Sub-Limits and the Room Rent Trap

Many health policies contain sub-limits — maximum payable amounts for specific items. The room rent cap is a common and controversial one. If a policyholder stays in a room that costs more than the daily limit, many insurers apply a proportionate deduction across the entire claim — not just the room rent component. This is legal under policy terms but is rarely explained clearly to customers at purchase.

“I had Rs 5 lakh health cover. My bill was Rs 2.8 lakh. They paid Rs 1.4 lakh. My room cost Rs 200 more per day than my sub-limit — so they deducted 40% from everything, including surgery.”

Waiting Period Disputes

Most health policies have waiting periods — for pre-existing diseases (2–4 years), specific illnesses (1–2 years), and an initial period (30–90 days) for all hospitalisation except accidents. Customers frequently report not being informed of these waiting periods at purchase, discovering them only when a claim is made.

ℹ️ Common health insurance exclusions to check Cosmetic surgery · Dental treatment · Maternity (unless add-on) · Self-inflicted injuries · Treatment outside India (most basic plans) · Expenses incurred within the initial waiting period · Certain listed diseases in the first year

5. Life Insurance Claim Disputes: Grief Compounded

A life insurance claim is made in the worst possible circumstances. The expectation is that the financial settlement will provide immediate stability. For a significant number of families, the reality is months of waiting, extensive documentation, and sometimes outright denial.

The Contestability Period Problem

Most life insurance policies contain a contestability period — typically two years from issuance — during which the insurer can investigate and reject a claim for any reason, including alleged non-disclosure. If the insured dies within this period, families report that claims are almost routinely investigated, with the burden of proof effectively on the nominee.

Nominee Challenges

Disputes around nominees — who is named, whether they are legally recognised, family disagreements — can hold up life insurance claims for years. Families in distress navigate family court proceedings, succession laws, and insurer bureaucracy simultaneously.

ℹ️ Your rights: Life insurance claims Under IRDAI regulations, a life insurer must settle a claim within 30 days of receiving all required documents. If investigation is needed, it must be completed and the claim settled within 90 days. Delays beyond these timelines attract interest payable to the claimant.

6. Motor Insurance: The Surveyor Problem

Motor insurance is mandatory for all vehicles on Indian roads — making it the most common form of insurance in the country. Yet consumer complaints about motor claims are among the most frequent on consumer forums.

Surveyor Assessment Disputes

When a vehicle is damaged, the insurer appoints a surveyor to assess damage and estimate repair costs. Consumers frequently report that surveyor assessments are far below the actual repair estimates from authorised service centres — leaving them paying significant amounts out of pocket despite having insurance.

Depreciation Deductions

Standard motor policies deduct depreciation on replaced parts. Many consumers report depreciation rates applied are higher than expected, significantly reducing the claim payout. Zero-depreciation add-on covers exist to address this — but are not always clearly explained to buyers at purchase.

Technical Rejection Grounds

Motor claims are also rejected when: the driver’s licence was not valid at the time; the vehicle had undisclosed modifications; or the vehicle was used for commercial purposes when insured for private use. Some of these exclusions are legitimate — others, critics argue, are applied with excessive rigidity to deny valid claims.


7. The Hidden Fine Print Most Customers Never Read

Every insurance policy is a legal contract. The fine print is technically available to everyone — but the reality of how insurance is sold in India means the vast majority of policyholders have never read their policy document carefully.

Fine Print ElementWhat It MeansImpact at Claim Time
Sub-limitsMaximum payable for specific treatmentsLarge gap between bill and payout
Co-pay / co-insuranceYou pay a fixed % of every claimOngoing out-of-pocket costs
Room rent capMax daily room rent coveredProportionate deduction on entire bill if exceeded
Waiting periodsConditions not covered for set periodClaim rejected if within wait period
Disease-specific exclusionsCertain conditions always excludedNo cover regardless of premium paid
Network hospital clauseCashless only at empanelled hospitalsNo cashless if admitted elsewhere
⚠️ The rule most agents won’t mention If your policy has a room rent cap of ₹3,000/day and you stay in a room costing ₹5,000/day, many insurers will proportionately deduct 40% from your ENTIRE claim — including surgery, ICU charges, and medicines. This can halve a multi-lakh payout. Always ask specifically about room rent sub-limits before buying.

8. Why Many Consumers Feel the System Favours Insurance Companies

Consumer advocates who study the insurance sector point to a fundamental structural problem: the relationship between an insurance company and a policyholder is profoundly asymmetric.

  • Information asymmetry: The insurer wrote the policy document. The policyholder is bound by terms they rarely fully understood at purchase.
  • Financial power imbalance: Insurers have legal teams, industry expertise, and substantial resources to contest claims. The average policyholder has none of these.
  • Incentive misalignment: Critics argue that at the operational level, claims staff may be incentivised to control payouts rather than maximise customer satisfaction.
  • Access to records: Insurers can obtain hospital records, medical histories, and investigation reports that the policyholder may not even know exist.
  • Regulatory distance: While IRDAI provides recourse mechanisms, accessing them requires awareness, literacy, and persistence that many claimants — particularly those in distress — simply do not have.

9. Real Customer Experiences Shared Online

The following section presents publicly available posts in which individual users have shared their experiences with insurance companies. These represent personal accounts and should be viewed as individual experiences rather than verified findings about any specific company. We include them because they reflect concerns that resonate widely with Indian consumers.

Editorial note: These are publicly available social media posts reflecting individual customer experiences and allegations. Readers should consider them as personal accounts rather than definitive proof of wrongdoing. We maintain neutrality and do not make unverified accusations against any specific insurer.
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Customer Experience — Posted publicly on X (Twitter)
This post is shared publicly on X. Click below to read the original tweet and full context from @sheela2010.
→ View Original Post by @sheela2010 on X
📌 What concern does this post appear to raise? The user appears to share concerns around the claim settlement experience — a theme that emerges repeatedly across consumer platforms. Posts like this typically highlight the gap between what was promised at policy purchase and what was experienced during the claim. Consumers raising such concerns often point to documentation requirements that feel excessive, processing timelines that stretch far beyond what was indicated, or a communication breakdown at a time of high emotional stress. The fact that such posts gain traction — with other users sharing similar accounts — suggests these are not isolated incidents but experiences shared by a broader segment of policyholders. For insurers, each such public post represents not just one unhappy customer, but a visible signal to thousands of prospective buyers about what their claim experience might look like.
𝕏
Customer Experience — Posted publicly on X (Twitter)
This post is shared publicly on X. Click below to read the original tweet and full context from @rishibagree.
→ View Original Post by @rishibagree on X
📌 What concern does this post appear to raise? This post appears to highlight what many consumers describe as a pattern of delayed resolution — where the insurer’s response seems to prioritise procedural compliance over the customer’s urgent need. Health or life insurance disputes often involve families simultaneously managing financial pressure and medical or grief crises. When an insurer’s response is slow or deflects to “further investigation,” consumers frequently interpret this as bad faith even when legitimate reasons may exist. The broader implication: claim resolution timelines need to be communicated proactively. Social media has become, for many consumers, the most effective avenue to get insurer attention — a troubling commentary on how internal escalation pathways are perceived.
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Customer Experience — Posted publicly on X (Twitter)
This post is shared publicly on X. Click below to read the original tweet and full context from @AdityaD_Shah.
→ View Original Post by @AdityaD_Shah on X
📌 What concern does this post appear to raise? Posts like this often centre on the experience of having a claim reduced on grounds the policyholder was not clearly informed about at purchase. The concept of informed consent is fundamental to any contract. When customers discover sub-limits, room rent caps, or co-pay clauses that substantially alter their payout, the sense of having been misled is powerful and understandable — even if the insurer is technically within their contractual rights. This gap between customer expectation and policy reality is at the heart of India’s insurance trust crisis. Addressing it requires not just better policy wording but fundamentally more transparent and customer-centric sales practices.
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Customer Experience — Posted publicly on X (Twitter)
This post is shared publicly on X. Click below to read the original tweet and full context from @SantaniSubhajit.
→ View Original Post by @SantaniSubhajit on X
📌 What concern does this post appear to raise? This post appears to touch on the sense of systemic disadvantage that many consumers feel when dealing with a large insurance corporation as an individual. Whether the specific concern is about the claim amount, rejection reason, or overall process, posts like these resonate widely because they capture an emotional truth: when you are sick, grieving, or financially vulnerable, having to fight a large organisation feels deeply unjust. Consumer-to-consumer sharing on social media serves an increasingly important accountability function — informing prospective buyers, generating regulatory attention, and pressing companies to respond. Insurers who engage constructively with public complaints often partially restore confidence; those who respond defensively find the post reaching a far larger audience than the original poster intended.

10. Are Existing Consumer Protection Mechanisms Strong Enough?

India has a reasonably robust consumer protection framework for insurance policyholders — on paper. IRDAI is the sector regulator. The Insurance Ombudsman scheme provides free, accessible dispute resolution. Consumer courts under the Consumer Protection Act 2019 offer another route. But in practice, consumer advocates identify significant gaps.

  • Awareness deficit: A large proportion of policyholders are unaware of the Ombudsman scheme. Many give up after the internal escalation process fails.
  • Ombudsman capacity: With thousands of complaints annually, resolution can take months even through this channel.
  • IRDAI’s reactive posture: Critics argue that regulatory intervention has historically been reactive rather than proactive — responding to systemic issues after widespread harm has accumulated.
  • Consumer court delays: Cases can drag on 1–3 years, during which the financial need that prompted the claim may have long since become critical.
  • Corporate legal resources: Insurers can engage full legal teams at every level. Individual consumers rarely can.
ℹ️ IRDAI’s recent reform signals IRDAI has introduced Bima Sugam (a digital insurance marketplace), tighter claim settlement guidelines, and a push for simplified policy documents. Consumer advocates cautiously welcome these steps while noting that implementation and enforcement remain the critical test.

11. What to Do Before Buying Insurance: A Practical Checklist

The single most effective time to protect yourself against a future claim dispute is before you sign the proposal form.

  • Read the policy document — specifically exclusions, waiting periods, and sub-limits — before paying the first premium, not after.
  • Declare all pre-existing conditions fully and accurately. A disclosure that seems unnecessary to you may be critical to the validity of your policy.
  • Ask your agent in writing: “What are the top 10 reasons this policy’s claims get rejected?” Get the answer in writing.
  • Check the insurer’s Claim Settlement Ratio (CSR) — published annually by IRDAI. A higher ratio suggests better settlement practices.
  • Verify your preferred hospital is in the insurer’s network before purchasing, not after hospitalisation.
  • Consider zero-depreciation add-on for motor insurance and room-rent-waiver add-on for health insurance — both eliminate major sources of claim disputes.
  • Keep copies of your proposal form, all medical reports submitted, and all communication with the insurer from day one.
  • Check the free look period — most policies allow 15–30 days to review and return the policy for a full refund if unsatisfied.
  • Understand who the TPA is, how to contact them, and what their claim response timelines are.
  • If purchasing through an agent, meet the insurer’s branch representative directly to confirm key terms.

12. What to Do After a Claim Rejection: Step-by-Step

A claim rejection is not the end of the road. Here is a systematic approach to challenging it:

  1. Get the rejection letter in writing with specific reasons cited. If you haven’t received one, demand it immediately.
  2. Gather all documents: policy document, proposal form copy, claim form, hospital records, all insurer/TPA communication, and the rejection letter.
  3. File an internal escalation — write formally to the insurer’s Grievance Redressal Officer (every insurer is required to have one). This creates a paper trail and triggers mandatory response timelines.
  4. Approach the Insurance Ombudsman — if the insurer doesn’t resolve your complaint within 30 days. This is free, and awards up to ₹50 lakh. Find your Ombudsman at cioins.co.in.
  5. File with IRDAI — register complaints at igms.irda.gov.in or call toll-free 155255.
  6. Consumer Forum — file with the District Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission. No lawyer required for claims under ₹50 lakh.
  7. Civil court — for high-value disputes where all other mechanisms have been exhausted.
✅ Most important: Document everything Every phone call — note the date, time, name of the representative, and what was said. Every email — keep copies. Every document submitted — retain originals, submit copies only. This paper trail is your strongest asset in any dispute.

13. How Insurance Companies Could Rebuild Consumer Trust

Many claim rejections are legitimate. Fraud, genuine non-disclosure, and excluded events do occur. But the intensity of consumer complaints suggests a systemic problem that goes beyond individual bad actors. Here is what reform-minded observers suggest:

Reform AreaSuggested ChangeExpected Benefit
Policy languageMandatory plain-language summaries of all exclusions in regional languagesReduces “I wasn’t told” disputes
Sales processVideo/audio confirmation of exclusion disclosures at saleReduces mis-selling complaints
Claims processSingle upfront document list — no follow-up queries unless genuinely new information surfacesEliminates documentation spiral
TransparencyPublic disclosure of top 10 rejection reasons per insurer per product typeEnables market comparison; creates accountability
Investigation timelinesMandatory interim payments during investigation for large medical claimsReduces financial distress during dispute
Agent accountabilityAgent commission linked partly to claims satisfaction scores of their policyholdersReduces incentive to mis-sell

🔑 Key Takeaways

  • Insurance advertising and insurance reality can diverge dramatically — understand both before buying.
  • Pre-existing disease clauses, non-disclosure allegations, and sub-limits are the most common grounds for rejection or underpayment.
  • Read your policy’s exclusion list before signing — not after your claim is rejected.
  • IRDAI mandates 30-day claim settlement timelines (90 days with investigation). Know your rights.
  • The Insurance Ombudsman offers free dispute resolution up to ₹50 lakh — use it before giving up.
  • Document every interaction with your insurer from day one of any claim.
  • Social media creates accountability, but internal and regulatory escalation remain the most effective formal paths.
  • Claim Settlement Ratios, while imperfect, offer a useful proxy for insurer performance. Compare before buying.

Frequently Asked Questions

These are the most commonly searched questions about insurance claim rejection in India — answered clearly and directly.

Why do insurance companies reject claims in India?
The most common reasons are: alleged non-disclosure of pre-existing conditions, claims made during a waiting period, missing or incorrect documentation, treatment at a non-network hospital for cashless claims, policy exclusions the customer was unaware of, and technical violations of policy conditions. Some rejections are legitimate; many others are disputed by policyholders and overturned through the Ombudsman or courts.
What should I do immediately if my health insurance claim is rejected?
First, get the rejection letter in writing with specific reasons cited. Then gather all your documents — policy, proposal form, hospital records, claim form, and all correspondence. Write formally to the insurer’s Grievance Redressal Officer. If unresolved within 30 days, approach the Insurance Ombudsman. For IRDAI complaints, use igms.irda.gov.in or call 155255.
Can an insurance company deny a genuine claim?
Yes — claims can be denied even when policyholders believe them to be legitimate. However, policyholders have the right to dispute any rejection through the Insurance Ombudsman, IRDAI’s grievance system, consumer courts, or civil courts. A significant proportion of disputed rejections are resolved in favour of the policyholder at the Ombudsman level.
How long can an insurer legally take to settle a claim in India?
Under IRDAI regulations, health insurance claims must be settled within 30 days of receiving all required documents. If an investigation is needed, the claim must be settled within 90 days. Life insurance claims must be settled within 30 days of all documents being received, or within 6 months if investigation is needed. Delays beyond these timelines attract interest payable to the claimant.
What are my rights as a policyholder in India?
Key rights include: a free look period (15–30 days to cancel a new policy for a full refund); the right to a written rejection letter with specific reasons; the right to approach the Insurance Ombudsman for free dispute resolution; the right to file with IRDAI; the right to approach consumer courts; and the right to receive interest on delayed claim settlements.
What is the Insurance Ombudsman and how do I reach them?
The Insurance Ombudsman is an independent dispute resolution body established under IRDAI’s framework. It is free to use, doesn’t require a lawyer, and can award up to ₹50 lakh in compensation. You must first file a complaint with the insurer and wait 30 days before approaching the Ombudsman. Visit cioins.co.in or call 155255.
What documents should I keep ready for any insurance claim?
For health claims: original policy, ID proof, hospital admission and discharge summary, all medical bills and prescriptions, doctor certificates, investigation reports, and claim form. For life insurance: original policy, death certificate, nominee’s ID and bank details, and medical records. For motor: FIR if applicable, driving licence, RC book, original repair estimates, and surveyor report. Always retain originals and submit copies.
Is the Claim Settlement Ratio (CSR) a reliable way to choose an insurer?
The CSR — published annually by IRDAI — shows the percentage of claims settled versus total claims received. It is a useful indicator but not a complete picture. A high CSR doesn’t guarantee your specific claim type will be settled. Compare CSR alongside the insurer’s complaint volume, solvency ratio, and qualitative customer reviews for a more rounded assessment.
What is the most common reason for health insurance claim rejection in India?
The most commonly cited reason is non-disclosure or misrepresentation of pre-existing conditions at the time of policy purchase. This is followed by claims made during a waiting period, treatment at non-network hospitals for cashless claims, and claims for excluded treatments. Incomplete or incorrect documentation is also a frequent basis for rejection or delay.
Can I sue an insurance company for wrongfully denying my claim?
Yes. You can file a complaint with the consumer court (District Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission for claims under ₹50 lakh, State Commission up to ₹2 crore, NCDRC above that). You can also file a civil suit. Consumer forums are generally more accessible and faster. You do not require a lawyer to file in consumer court for most claim amounts.
What is a pre-existing disease (PED) in insurance and why does it matter?
A pre-existing disease is any condition that existed before the insurance policy was purchased. Most health insurance policies exclude PEDs for a waiting period of 2–4 years. The controversy arises when insurers claim a condition was pre-existing that the policyholder had no knowledge of — such as undiagnosed early-stage hypertension or diabetes. Courts and ombudsmen have, in multiple rulings, held that unknown, undiagnosed conditions cannot be treated as wilful non-disclosure.
How can I challenge a claim rejection effectively?
Build your case systematically: obtain the written rejection with specific reasons; gather all documents contradicting those grounds; write a formal complaint to the insurer’s Grievance Redressal Officer; escalate to IRDAI (igms.irda.gov.in) if unresolved in 30 days; file with the Insurance Ombudsman for free independent adjudication; consider consumer court if other channels fail. At each stage, be specific about what policy clause or regulation you believe has been violated.
What is a co-pay clause in health insurance?
A co-pay or co-insurance clause requires you to pay a fixed percentage of every claim — for example, 10% or 20% — regardless of the total claim amount. Co-pay clauses are common in senior citizen health policies. Many consumers report learning about them only when they receive a settlement for less than the full bill. Always ask about co-pay at the time of purchase.
What does “non-disclosure of material fact” mean and can it void my policy?
Every policyholder has a duty to disclose all material facts — information that would have influenced the insurer’s decision to issue the policy or the premium charged. If an insurer determines a material fact was not disclosed, they can repudiate the claim and potentially void the policy, returning only premiums (sometimes with deductions). However, this right has limits — disclosure must have been wilful, not merely negligent; and courts have held that insurers who continue accepting renewals cannot always claim non-disclosure from the original proposal.
Is there a time limit for filing an insurance claim after an incident?
Yes. Most policies specify a claim intimation period — typically 24–48 hours for accidents, and as soon as reasonably possible for hospitalisation. For planned hospitalisation, pre-authorisation should be sought 48–72 hours in advance. For reimbursement claims, most policies require document submission within 15–30 days of discharge. Missing these timelines can be used as grounds for rejection, though courts have sometimes ruled that delayed intimation alone is not sufficient grounds if no prejudice to the insurer can be demonstrated.

The Safety Net Has Too Many Holes

Insurance, at its best, is one of the most powerful financial tools available to ordinary people — a mechanism by which millions share the burden of individual catastrophe. At its worst, it is a product sold on emotional promises and delivered through technical rejections.

The truth in India lies somewhere between these poles. What is consistent, however, is that the consumer — the individual policyholder facing a medical crisis, a death in the family, or a damaged vehicle — is almost always the least powerful party in any dispute.

The good news: the regulatory framework, however imperfect, does provide meaningful redress. The Insurance Ombudsman, IRDAI’s grievance system, and consumer courts have all produced rulings that vindicated policyholders. Awareness, documentation, and persistence matter enormously.

Read the fine print. Ask the hard questions. Keep every document. And know that if a claim is wrongfully denied, you have options — and the law is on your side more often than the insurer would like you to believe.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or financial advice. Customer experiences referenced from social media represent individual accounts and are not verified findings about any specific company. For personalised advice on insurance disputes, consult a qualified legal professional.