The passage of the Sabka Bima Sabki Raksha (Amendment of Insurance Laws) Bill, 2025 by Parliament on Friday (December 19) marks a watershed moment in the evolution of India’s insurance sector, signalling the government’s intent to modernise regulation, expand insurance coverage, and rebuild trust between insurers and policyholders at a time when confidence in claim settlement processes remains fragile.
The Bill amends three cornerstone legislations, the Insurance Act, 1938, the Life Insurance Corporation Act, 1956, and the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI) Act, 1999 to create what the government describes as a more flexible, inclusive, and future-ready insurance framework aligned with India’s long-term development goals and the national vision of “Insurance for All by 2047.”
According to an official statement issued after the Bill’s passage, insurance is being positioned as a critical pillar of economic resilience and social security as India approaches the centenary of its Independence. The statement emphasised that the central challenge before policymakers and regulators is to ensure that insurance protection becomes universal, affordable, and trusted, particularly for households vulnerable to economic shocks.
The amendments are aimed at addressing legacy bottlenecks in regulation, strengthening governance norms, and modernising oversight mechanisms to keep pace with India’s changing demographic, economic, and social realities. With rising life expectancy, growing healthcare costs, and new forms of livelihoods emerging in a digital economy, policymakers believe the insurance sector needs greater agility to design products beyond traditional life and general insurance.
Finance Minister highlights policyholder protection
Welcoming the Bill in the Lok Sabha, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman underlined the urgent need to deepen insurance penetration and awareness across the country. She stressed that awareness is as critical as availability, noting that many policyholders remain unaware of their entitlements and the claims process, often leading to disputes and delays.
A key highlight of the reforms is the creation of the Policyholders’ Education and Protection Fund, which will be financed through penalties imposed by the IRDAI. The fund will be used specifically for policyholder education, awareness campaigns, and protection initiatives, with the aim of reducing mis-selling and improving consumer understanding of insurance products.
The Finance Minister also made a strong case for enhanced capital infusion into the insurance sector. She noted that greater capital availability would enable insurers to invest in advanced technology, world-class risk assessment frameworks, and globally competitive products. In this context, the removal of the upper cap on foreign direct investment (FDI) in insurance is expected to act as a catalyst for long-term growth and innovation, while making the sector more attractive to global investors.
One of the most notable features of the Bill is its approach to reform. Instead of embedding detailed consumer rights and claim procedures into the statute, the government has chosen to significantly expand the powers of the IRDAI, leaving operational details to regulations and enforcement.
Under the amended framework, IRDAI gains clearer authority to issue binding directions, regulate commissions and incentives, impose higher penalties linked to policyholder harm, order disgorgement of wrongful gains, and publicly disclose enforcement actions. The intent, is to improve market discipline and deter unfair practices over time.
Claims Settlement: The core consumer concern
For most insurance buyers, a policy’s true value is tested at the moment a claim is filed. This is also where trust has often broken down. Delayed settlements, repeated document requests, late invocation of exclusions, and poorly explained rejections have long been sources of consumer frustration.
While the new law tightens regulatory oversight, it does not directly alter claim settlement timelines or processes in the statute itself. Insurers will now be required to maintain detailed electronic records of policies and claims, including reasons for rejection, and share these with the regulator on an ongoing basis. This is expected to improve traceability and give IRDAI greater visibility into systemic issues.
Notably, the absence of statutory claim timelines is a conscious design choice. Claims management varies widely across life, health, and general insurance, and rigid timelines in law could reduce flexibility or create unintended consequences.
Enforcement becomes the real test
Where the law is expected to make a tangible difference is in enforcement. By explicitly empowering IRDAI to order disgorgement of wrongful gains, cap commissions in the interest of policyholders, and mandate cleaner digital records, the amendments strengthen the regulator’s ability to act decisively against errant insurers.
The push towards electronic servicing and stricter norms around data accuracy, security, confidentiality, and consent could reduce disputes arising from missing documents or inconsistent records, an issue that has plagued both insurers and consumers.
Yet, regulatory power alone is not a panacea. Many policyholders lack the time, resources, or legal awareness to pursue complaints or litigation. Grievance redressal mechanisms, including insurance ombudsmen, remain overstretched, with delays in hearings and challenges in enforcing awards diluting their effectiveness.
For the Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC), the reforms reaffirm its role as a trusted national institution with a developmental mandate. For nearly seven decades, LIC has been central to expanding life insurance coverage across income groups and geographies. The legislative changes are seen as an opportunity for LIC to leverage technology at scale, improve service delivery, and contribute more effectively to universal insurance coverage.
From a financial inclusion perspective, the amendments aim to accelerate insurance penetration among underserved segments, including rural households, informal sector workers, women, and first-time policyholders. Simplified processes, digital adoption, and scalable distribution models are expected to support the broader public policy goal of extending formal financial protection to every citizen.
The timing of the reforms is also significant, coming shortly after the announcement of a full GST waiver on all individual insurance policies, a move that has brought considerable relief to policyholders and is expected to improve affordability.
What consumers are likely to see next
Over the next few years, consumers are likely to witness greater competition as new players enter the market, improved product design, wider distribution, and more seamless digital journeys. Increased capital infusion should also strengthen insurers’ financial and technical capabilities.
The real test, however, will lie in execution. Friction in contested claims, especially in health insurance, where medical interpretation and hospital paperwork often complicate settlements is expected to persist in the near term.
In essence, the Sabka Bima Sabki Raksha Bill strengthens the referee more than it rewrites the rulebook. It equips the regulator with sharper tools, cleaner data, and stronger deterrents, but leaves the consumer experience heavily dependent on enforcement.
As India moves towards becoming a developed economy by 2047, the insurance sector will play a vital role in protecting households, mobilising long-term savings, and supporting economic stability. Whether this landmark reform truly restores trust will ultimately be judged not by its intent, but by how quickly and transparently the next claim is settled for the average policyholder.












