Missing one life insurance premium does not instantly destroy your cover. IRDAI rules give you a grace period to pay late while the policy stays in force, and if it still lapses, a revival window of three to five years to bring it back. This guide explains both timelines, what revival costs, and how to complain if an insurer wrongly denies it.
Quick answer: A grace period is the extra time after the due date to pay a missed premium while cover continues: 15 days for monthly mode and 30 days for quarterly, half-yearly or yearly modes. If you still do not pay, the policy lapses. You can then revive it within the revival period: 3 years for unit-linked (ULIP) policies and 5 years for non-linked policies, counted from the date of the first unpaid premium.
The grace period is a built-in extension after the premium due date during which the policy remains fully in force. Revival is the process of restoring a policy that has lapsed by paying the overdue premiums, usually with interest, within a fixed revival period set by IRDAI. Both protect policyholders from losing cover over a short delay.
Life insurance contracts are governed by the Insurance Act 1938 and regulated by the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India under the IRDAI Act 1999. The operative rules on grace period and revival are in the IRDAI Master Circular on Life Insurance Products (Ref: IRDAI/ACTL/MSTCIR/MISC/89/6/2024, dated 12 June 2024), issued under the IRDAI (Insurance Products) Regulations, 2024.
| Item | Rule under IRDAI Master Circular 2024 |
|---|---|
| Grace period (monthly mode) | 15 days |
| Grace period (quarterly, half-yearly, yearly) | 30 days |
| Status during grace period | Policy remains in force; full risk cover continues |
| Revival period (linked / ULIP) | 3 years from first unpaid premium |
| Revival period (non-linked) | 5 years from first unpaid premium |
| Non-contestability | Policy cannot be questioned after 3 years from issuance, commencement of risk, or revival |
Death during the grace period: If the insured dies within the grace period before paying the due premium, the policy is treated as in force and the death claim is payable after deducting the unpaid premium for the policy year. This is a standard term in IRDAI-compliant life policies.
Insurer's duty to inform: For discontinued policies, the insurer must communicate the policy status within three months of the first unpaid premium and offer the option to revive within the revival period.
Consider a salaried policyholder on a non-linked endowment plan with yearly premiums. She misses the April due date but pays on the 25th day, inside the 30-day grace period, so cover never stops. The next year she misses entirely and the policy lapses. Eighteen months later she pays about ₹48,000 in arrears plus roughly ₹4,200 interest, signs a Declaration of Good Health, and the insurer revives the policy on original terms. Because she acted well inside the 5-year non-linked revival window, she kept her original premium rate and sum assured. This scenario is illustrative.
If a public-sector insurer (such as LIC) wrongly denies revival, you can use a grievance plus an RTI request for the file noting.
To: The Grievance Redressal Officer / CPIO Subject: Wrongful denial of policy revival - Policy No. ________ Under the IRDAI Master Circular on Life Insurance Products dated 12 June 2024, my policy was within the revival period of ____ years from the date of first unpaid premium (____). I applied for revival on ____ and paid arrears with interest. The revival was denied on ____. I request: 1. The reasons recorded for declining revival, with file notings. 2. A copy of the underwriting decision and any medical assessment. 3. The internal guidelines applied to my revival request. [For LIC and other public authorities, this is sought under the Right to Information Act 2005, Section 6.] Name / Signature / Date
If the insurer does not resolve the grievance, escalate to IRDAI through the Bima Bharosa portal (the integrated grievance system formerly called IGMS) at bimabharosa.irdai.gov.in, and then to the Insurance Ombudsman if still unsatisfied.
No. It is 15 days for monthly mode and 30 days for quarterly, half-yearly and yearly modes, per the IRDAI Master Circular on Life Insurance Products 2024.
Yes. The policy stays in force through the grace period. If the insured dies during this time, the claim is paid after deducting the unpaid premium.
The revival period is 3 years for unit-linked (ULIP) policies and 5 years for non-linked policies, both counted from the date of the first unpaid premium.
You must submit a Declaration of Good Health. For higher sums assured or longer lapses, the insurer may require fresh medical underwriting, and revival can be on revised terms or declined.
Raise a written grievance with the insurer, then escalate to IRDAI's Bima Bharosa portal, and finally to the Insurance Ombudsman. Keep all payment proofs and correspondence.
No. Once the 3-year or 5-year revival period ends, the policy cannot be revived and only the discontinuance or surrender value, if any, is paid.