From 1 April 2026, every insurer in India must run a Board-approved anti-fraud system under the IRDAI Insurance Fraud Monitoring Framework Guidelines 2025, issued on 9 October 2025. The rules tighten how companies detect and act on fraud, but they do not let an insurer reject your honest claim without proof or a hearing.
If you are short on time, jump to “Your rights as a policyholder” below. Your claim cannot be denied as fraud arbitrarily, and you can challenge any such tag through grievance redressal, the Bima Bharosa portal and the Insurance Ombudsman.
The Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI) issued the IRDAI (Insurance Fraud Monitoring Framework) Guidelines, 2025 under the IRDAI Act 1999 and the Insurance Act 1938. The framework comes into force on 1 April 2026. On that date it repeals the earlier IRDAI circular on the Fraud Monitoring Framework dated 21 January 2013.
The goal is to deter, prevent, detect, report and remedy fraud across the insurance industry. IRDAI says this protects policyholders' interests and maintains public trust. So the framework is mainly a governance duty placed on insurers, not a new burden on the ordinary customer.
What changed is the depth. The 2013 circular set a basic anti-fraud expectation. The 2025 guidelines build a structured, accountable system inside each company and stretch responsibility across the whole distribution chain.
Effective date: 1 April 2026. Issued: 9 October 2025. On the effective date, the old 21 January 2013 Fraud Monitoring Framework circular stands repealed.
The guidelines place clear, named duties on every insurer:
In short, fraud control is no longer a side desk. It becomes a Board-level function with its own committee, its own unit and an annual review cycle.
The framework is built to catch dishonest claims, not honest ones. As a genuine policyholder you keep strong protections:
Follow these steps in order. Each step has its own clock, so do not wait.
IRDAI is a public authority under the RTI Act 2005, so it has a Public Information Officer (PIO). You can file a Section 6 application asking for the text of the 2025 guidelines, related circulars, or aggregate fraud-reporting statistics. The PIO must reply within 30 days. If there is no reply or an evasive one, file a first appeal within 30 days of that deadline.
Note: RTI works against the public regulator, not against a private insurer. A complaint about your own insurer's conduct belongs on Bima Bharosa and, if needed, the Insurance Ombudsman. Use RTI to understand the rules; use the grievance route to fix your case.
To draft a clean application, use the AI RTI Drafter. If your first reply is poor, run it through the PIO Reply Checker before you escalate with the First Appeal Builder. For deadlines, the Timeline Tracker keeps your 30-day clocks straight.
Suppose Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak files a hospital cashless claim. The insurer flags it as a suspected fraud and stalls. Under the new framework, that flag should come from the insurer's Fraud Monitoring Unit on real grounds, not a hunch.
Dr. Pathak first asks for the reason in writing. The insurer cannot simply say “fraud” with no clause or evidence. He files a grievance, then escalates on Bima Bharosa. Separately, he files an RTI with IRDAI for the guidelines and general fraud-reporting policy, so he understands exactly what the regulator requires of insurers. With the rule text in hand, his Ombudsman complaint is far stronger.
The lesson: the framework gives insurers a duty to act fairly, and gives honest policyholders a clear paper trail to enforce that duty.
The IRDAI (Insurance Fraud Monitoring Framework) Guidelines, 2025 were issued on 9 October 2025 and come into force on 1 April 2026. On that date they repeal the earlier Fraud Monitoring Framework circular dated 21 January 2013.
Not directly. The framework places duties on insurers and their distribution chains. It matters to you because it tightens how insurers detect and act on fraud, while keeping your right to fair treatment and dispute resolution intact.
No. A fraud finding must rest on proper grounds, not suspicion. If your claim is tagged as fraudulent, you can dispute it through the insurer's grievance redressal, the Bima Bharosa portal and the Insurance Ombudsman.
It is a dedicated and independent committee each insurer must set up, headed by a Key Management Personnel. A supporting Fraud Monitoring Unit, kept independent of internal audit, helps it deter, detect and report fraud.
Use the insurer's grievance redressal officer first. If unresolved, escalate on IRDAI's Bima Bharosa portal and then to the Insurance Ombudsman under the Insurance Ombudsman Rules 2017. RTI is for the regulator, not the private insurer.
Yes. IRDAI is a public authority under the RTI Act 2005. File a Section 6 application with its PIO for the guidelines text, related circulars or general fraud-reporting statistics. The reply is due within 30 days.
The Insurance Ombudsman, governed by the Insurance Ombudsman Rules 2017, handles policyholder complaints up to a specified value. Check the current ceiling on the Ombudsman's official material before you file, as the figure is set by rule.
The 2025 guidelines repeal the IRDAI circular on the Fraud Monitoring Framework dated 21 January 2013. The new framework is broader, with a Board-approved policy, a dedicated committee and accountability across the distribution chain.