Your insurer has 1 hour to approve a cashless request at admission and 3 hours to clear your discharge once the hospital sends the discharge authorisation request. This is a binding timeline set by IRDAI, not a courtesy. If the insurer misses the 3 hour discharge window, any extra amount the hospital charges for the delay must be paid by the insurer from its own shareholder funds, not by you.
If you are short on time, jump to the decision flow below for what to do when the hospital will not let you leave because cashless is stuck.
This page is about the time mandate, the clock the insurer must beat. It is not about a flat refusal. If your cashless request is refused outright, see what to do when cashless is denied at the hospital.
Use this flow when you are at the hospital and the discharge or admission approval is delayed.
Do not pay the full bill in cash just to get out unless you have no choice. If you do pay, keep every receipt and file for reimbursement plus the delay amount.
The source is the IRDAI Master Circular on Health Insurance Business, reference IRDAI/HLT/CIR/PRO/84/5/2024, dated 29 May 2024. It is still the operative master circular as of June 2026.
On the 1 hour approval, clause 15 says:
“Insurer shall decide on the request for cashless authorization immediately but not more than one hour of receipt of request.”
On the 3 hour discharge, clause 16 says:
“Insurer shall grant final authorization within three hours of the receipt of discharge authorization request from the hospital. In no case, the policyholder shall be made to wait to be discharged from the Hospital.”
On who pays for delay, clause 16 continues:
“If there is any delay beyond three hours, the additional amount if any charged by the hospital shall be borne by the insurer from shareholder's fund.”
Clause 15 opens with the larger goal:
“Every insurer shall strive to achieve 100% cashless claim settlement in a time bound manner.”
Note the deadline for systems. The circular required insurers to put the systems and procedures in place not later than 31 July 2024. That date has passed, so the clocks are live now.
There are two distinct timelines. Knowing which one applies stops the insurer from buying time.
| Stage | Trigger | Deadline | What the rule binds |
|---|---|---|---|
| Admission | Hospital sends the cashless authorisation request | 1 hour to decide | Insurer must approve, query or decline inside the hour |
| Discharge | Hospital sends the final discharge authorisation request | 3 hours to grant | Insurer must clear it, and you cannot be held back |
The 1 hour clock is about getting cashless started. The 3 hour clock is about getting you out of the bed. Each starts from the hospital's request, not from your phone call.
The mandate falls on the insurer. The TPA, the third party administrator that handles claims for many insurers, acts as the insurer's agent. So when the TPA sits on your file, the insurer is still on the clock. You can hold the insurer to the timeline even if a TPA is the one delaying.
The hospital is the party that raises the request. IRDAI does not regulate hospitals, so the hospital is not bound by the 1 hour and 3 hour clocks the way the insurer is. The rule protects you from the hospital by stopping the insurer from making you wait. If a TPA is the one stalling, see how to act when a TPA blocks your cashless claim.
Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak was ready for discharge by noon. The hospital sent the final bill to the TPA at 12:15 pm. By 4 pm there was no clearance. Under clause 16 the insurer was in breach from 3:15 pm, and any extra room charge for that afternoon was the insurer's liability, not his.
Escalation has a clear order. Do each step in writing and keep the reference numbers.
Bima Bharosa never asks for any payment. Ignore any link or QR code that claims to send you money. For the wider picture of claim delay rights, see your rights when a health insurance claim is delayed.
For a step by step framework on drafting clean, evidence backed complaints, The RTI Playbook is a useful companion.
It is a binding timeline in the IRDAI Master Circular on Health Insurance Business dated 29 May 2024. The insurer must decide on a cashless request within 1 hour of the hospital sending it. The insurer must grant final discharge authorisation within 3 hours of the hospital sending the discharge request. The aim is to move the industry toward 100% cashless settlement.
The insurer pays. Clause 16 of the circular says that if there is any delay beyond 3 hours, the additional amount charged by the hospital because of that delay shall be borne by the insurer from its shareholder funds. It cannot be charged to you or recovered from the policyholder pool. Keep the bill that shows the delay charge.
The rule binds the insurer. A TPA is the insurer's agent, so when the TPA delays your file, the insurer is still in breach of the timeline. You hold the insurer responsible. The TPA being slow is not a valid reason for missing the 1 hour or 3 hour clock.
The rule says in no case shall the policyholder be made to wait to be discharged from the hospital. The hospital can raise the request, but the insurer must clear it within 3 hours. If you are held back only because the insurer has not responded, the insurer is in breach and owes any extra delay charge.
Yes. This page is about the timeline, where cashless is approved in principle but the clock is being missed. A denial is a flat refusal of cashless at the desk. If your request is refused outright, read the dedicated guide on cashless denied at the hospital instead, since the remedy there starts with reimbursement and complaint, not the clock.
First raise a written grievance with your insurer. If there is no response in a reasonable time, or you are unhappy with the reply, register a complaint on the IRDAI Bima Bharosa portal at bimabharosa.irdai.gov.in. You can also call the toll free grievance number 155255 or 1800 4254 732, or email [email protected]. Attach your policy, the timestamped hospital bills and the insurer complaint reference.
No. As of June 2026 the Master Circular on Health Insurance Business dated 29 May 2024, reference IRDAI/HLT/CIR/PRO/84/5/2024, remains the operative master circular. The circular itself says it is reviewed every year unless review or repeal is warranted earlier. No later master circular has changed the 1 hour and 3 hour cashless timelines.
Last reviewed: 15 June 2026.