Quick answer. After a health insurance claim is rejected, follow a strict three-step escalation: write to your insurer's Grievance Redressal Officer first (15-day SLA), then register on IRDAI's Bima Bharosa portal at bimabharosa.irdai.gov.in, then file with the Insurance Ombudsman at cioins.co.in within one year of rejection. All three stages are free; no advocate is required. This is a citizen guidance page - it is not an official government, regulator, insurance, or legal services page.
For the full legal background on why claims get rejected and what rights you hold, see Health insurance claim rejected IRDAI complaint India.
India's complaint system is sequential - you cannot go straight to the ombudsman without a paper trail showing the insurer was given a chance to respond. Each stage has a hard deadline. Skipping a step or waiting too long can close a route that would otherwise be free and effective.
The three-stage path is: insurer Grievance Redressal Officer (GRO) first, then IRDAI's Bima Bharosa portal if the insurer does not reply or the reply is unsatisfactory, then the Insurance Ombudsman as the final escalation before consumer court. Each step is covered below with the exact timeline clock.
Under the IRDAI (Protection of Policyholders' Interests) Regulations 2017, every insurer must appoint a GRO and publish the officer's name, email, and toll-free number on the policy document and the insurer's website.
What to do:
Important deadlines here: The insurer has 30 days from receipt of all final claim documents to settle or repudiate a health insurance claim (IRDAI Master Circular on Health Insurance Business, May 2024). If the insurer missed that 30-day settlement clock, mention it explicitly in your GRO complaint.
Bima Bharosa (bimabharosa.irdai.gov.in) is IRDAI's current integrated grievance portal, a revamp of the earlier IGMS system. It is free and available in English and Hindi.
How to register:
Alternative contact if you cannot use the online portal:
When to move to Stage 3: If you get no resolution through Bima Bharosa, or the insurer's response is still unsatisfactory, you are eligible to approach the Insurance Ombudsman - provided you have not yet crossed the one-year deadline from the original rejection.
The Insurance Ombudsman is a free, statutory dispute-resolution forum set up under the Insurance Ombudsman Rules 2017. There are 18 territorial offices across India. You file at the office whose jurisdiction covers your residential address or the insurer's branch.
Eligibility to file:
How to file:
What happens after you file:
Keep physical and digital copies of all of the following:
RTI under the RTI Act 2005 is useful only to obtain documentary evidence from a public-sector insurer - for example, to ask for file noting, inspection reports, or internal communications. RTI is not a substitute for the GRO, Bima Bharosa, or Ombudsman routes. Use the statutory escalation sequence first. See The RTI Playbook for using RTI to support insurance disputes where a public authority is involved.
No. The Insurance Ombudsman Rules 2017 require that you have first approached the insurer's Grievance Redressal Officer and either received an unsatisfactory reply or received no reply within 30 days. Filing directly will result in the complaint being returned to you for non-exhaustion of the insurer's internal process.
Yes. Bima Bharosa at bimabharosa.irdai.gov.in is IRDAI's current grievance platform, a revamped version of the earlier IGMS system under a new name. The interface and complaint workflow are updated, but the underlying purpose is the same - it routes your complaint to the insurer and lets IRDAI monitor the resolution.
The Insurance Ombudsman handles disputes only up to Rs 50 lakh. For higher amounts, approach the consumer commission under the Consumer Protection Act 2019: District Commission up to Rs 50 lakh in consideration paid, State Commission Rs 50 lakh to Rs 2 crore, National Commission above Rs 2 crore. These commissions involve more time and typically benefit from legal help.
The Ombudsman is required to pass an award within 3 months of receiving all required documents and information. If mediation leads to an agreed settlement earlier, the insurer must comply within 15 days of accepting the recommendation.
If you accept the Ombudsman's recommendation or award, the matter is settled and you cannot re-file in consumer court on the same claim. If you decline the award, you retain the right to approach consumer court. The Ombudsman route is faster and free, but the decision is yours on whether to accept the award.
A cashless denial at admission is a separate stage from a post-discharge reimbursement rejection. Call the insurer's 24-hour helpline and TPA immediately. Under the IRDAI Master Circular on Health Insurance Business (May 2024), the insurer must respond to a cashless authorisation request within 1 hour and issue final discharge authorisation within 3 hours. If those windows are missed, the insurer is liable for any additional hospital charges. If the denial cannot be resolved on the spot, file a GRO complaint and escalate through Bima Bharosa as above.