Non-disclosure rejection means the insurer says you hid a material fact at the proposal stage. The insurer must prove four things together, the fact was material, the fact was within your knowledge, the omission was deliberate, and the policy was contested within 2 years of issue. If any one of these fails, the rejection is on weak ground and you can fight it.
Part of the Health Insurance Claim Recovery Series by RightToInformation.Wiki.
The single biggest thing to grasp is this. A rejection letter that simply says “non-disclosure” is not the end of the story. It is a starting position by the insurer. The law puts a heavy load on the insurer to back that position with evidence. Most citizens never demand that evidence and that is exactly why rejections stick.
For a non-disclosure rejection to stand in law, the insurer must prove all four of the following together.
If any one of these fails, the rejection is on weak ground. Your reply letter should attack each ingredient in turn and ask the insurer to prove it.
The line between a defensible mistake and a valid suppression decides the entire dispute. Use this table when you draft your reply.
| Mistake (defensible) | Deliberate suppression (rejection valid) |
|---|---|
| Forgot a single elevated reading from 5 years ago | Concealed a heart-attack history within the last 6 months |
| Did not mention casual chest pain that resolved on its own | Did not mention ongoing cancer treatment at proposal stage |
| Agent filled the form incorrectly without your input | Lied directly when asked a clear specific question |
| Symptoms only with no diagnosis on record | Confirmed diagnosis already entered in hospital notes |
| Inconclusive lab values that no doctor flagged | Confirmed diagnosis in physician notes signed before proposal |
| Family member's condition wrongly attributed to you | Your own admitted illness left off the form on purpose |
| Vague compound question read in good faith | Specific yes/no question answered falsely |
The line is intent plus materiality. Courts have consistently held that innocent omission is not enough to reject. Read the Supreme Court ruling in Sulbha Prakash Motegaonkar v LIC 2015 for the cleanest statement of that principle.
Documents checklist
Policy copy and Key Features Document, original proposal form plus signed declaration (demand a copy if not held), premium receipts for every renewal (proof of continuity), current hospital records, prior medical records for at least 5 years pre-policy where possible, discharge summary, Inpatient Case Paper (ICP), the rejection letter, all TPA and insurer emails, agent communication if applicable, and any prescription or doctor note that contradicts the insurer's reading of your medical history.
These questions are framed so that any honest reply forces the insurer to either back the rejection with evidence or quietly settle the claim. In a large share of disputes, the second outcome is the one that follows.
Subject: Reply to non-disclosure rejection - Claim ID [CLAIM ID], Policy [POLICY NUMBER] To: [Insurer Grievance Officer email] Cc: [TPA email] Dear Sir / Madam, I refer to the rejection of my health insurance claim citing non-disclosure. I deny the rejection and request the following within 15 working days. 1. A copy of the proposal form plus signed declaration on file with the insurer. 2. The SPECIFIC question and my SPECIFIC answer that the insurer says is non-disclosure. 3. The medical record the insurer relies on. 4. Proof that the omitted fact was within my knowledge at proposal stage. 5. Confirmation whether the contest is within 2 years from policy issue per Section 45 of the Insurance Act 1938. 6. Confirmation whether the IRDAI Master Circular dated 29 May 2024 moratorium provision applies, given [N] completed renewals. I rely on the following. a. Section 45 of the Insurance Act 1938 which shifts the burden of proving deliberate suppression of a material fact onto the insurer after 2 years from policy issue. b. IRDAI Master Circular on Health Insurance Business dated 29 May 2024 paragraph on moratorium which bars contestation of a claim after 8 continuous renewals except in proved fraud. c. Supreme Court in Branch Manager, Bajaj Allianz v Saurabh Prakash 2006 where the court held that a material fact must be in policyholder knowledge. d. Supreme Court in Sulbha Prakash Motegaonkar v LIC 2015 where the court held that inadvertent omission is not material non-disclosure. e. Supreme Court in LIC v Asha Goel 2001 where the court held that even after 2 years, fraud must be proved with material evidence. If a reasoned reply does not arrive in 15 working days, I shall file at IRDAI Bima Bharosa and Insurance Ombudsman. Regards, [Your Name] Policy: [POLICY NUMBER] Claim ID: [CLAIM ID] [Phone] [Email]
This template puts six clear questions and five legal anchors on the table in one short letter. The insurer must address each point or its reply is itself a ground for escalation. Keep a copy and a delivery proof for every channel used.
These are the eight most common insurer claims and the standard counter that defeats each in correspondence.
Any of these is enough to escalate. The next step in each case is the same. File at IRDAI Bima Bharosa, then the Insurance Ombudsman, then the consumer court.
Complaint route:
Insurer Grievance Officer (15 working days) ⇒ IRDAI Bima Bharosa (15 working days) ⇒ Insurance Ombudsman (30-day SLA, free, claims up to ₹50 lakh, binding on insurer) ⇒ Consumer court via edaakhil or consumer court.
Use the IRDAI policyholder portal for status checks and the IRDAI IGMS dashboard for older complaints. The IRDAI toll-free numbers are 155255 and 1800-4254-732. The Ombudsman procedure is described in detail at the cioins procedure page. The IRDAI grievance redressal mechanism is summarised at the IRDAI grievance redressal page.
A non-disclosure rejection is not just a denial of one claim. It also flags your policy as voidable. If you accept the rejection without a fight, the same insurer or its TPA can rely on the same reading at the next renewal or the next claim. Even worse, the rejection may be reported under industry-wide data sharing arrangements, leading to higher premiums or refusals when you shop for a new policy.
This is the reason to put the four-ingredient test, Section 45 reference and IRDAI 8-year moratorium in writing on day one. Even if you eventually settle on a partial payout, the written reply means the insurer cannot quietly mark you as a fraud risk. The paper trail also feeds directly into the Ombudsman complaint if escalation becomes necessary.
The Indian insurance contract is built on a principle called uberrima fides, meaning utmost good faith. This goes both ways. You are expected to disclose what you actually know to be material, and the insurer is expected to ask clear specific questions and to underwrite carefully. The law balances the duty by allocating the burden of proof.
A reply letter that names the exact stage of the policy and quotes the right statute defeats most boilerplate rejections. The insurer's grievance officer reads the law just as you do. Once your letter is on file, the rejection is no longer a one-sided decision. It is a contested claim that the insurer must defend at the Ombudsman if it does not settle.
Many disputes start because the proposal form asks questions like “have you ever consulted a doctor for any disease, disorder or treatment?”. Read literally, almost every adult would answer yes, since a routine fever consultation is technically a consultation. The law saves the citizen here. A question that is so broad that it captures harmless events is read narrowly. Only material conditions, with a written diagnosis or treatment plan, count for non-disclosure.
If your rejection letter quotes such a vague question, your reply should specifically argue that the question is overbroad and that any reasonable reading of your answer was correct. Pair this argument with the contra proferentem rule. The insurer drafted the form. The cost of vague drafting falls on the insurer, not on you.
Non-disclosure means failing to mention a material fact on the proposal form at the time of buying or renewing the policy. The insurer says the omission was relevant to its underwriting decision. Only deliberate, knowing omissions of material facts count. Honest mistakes and trivial omissions are not non-disclosure.
The insurer must prove four things together. First, the fact was material. Second, the fact was within your knowledge at proposal stage. Third, the omission was deliberate. Fourth, the contest is within 2 years of policy issue. If any one fails, the rejection is weak. Demand evidence on each ingredient in writing.
A mistake is an honest or inadvertent omission such as forgetting a single high reading from years ago, or an agent filling a form incorrectly. A deliberate suppression is hiding a fact you knew was relevant, for example concealing a heart attack from 6 months back. The line is intent plus materiality.
Yes. Section 45 of the Insurance Act 1938 places a strict burden on the insurer once the policy has run for 2 years from issue. After the 2-year mark, the insurer must prove fraud with material evidence. A mere allegation of non-disclosure is not enough to void the policy beyond this window.
The IRDAI Master Circular on Health Insurance Business dated 29 May 2024 includes a moratorium clause. After 8 continuous policy years (counted from the first renewal), the insurer cannot contest a claim or void the policy except on proved fraud. This is a powerful second layer of protection beyond Section 45.
No. If your agent filled the proposal form on your behalf and made errors, the insurer carries the liability. Indian consumer forums and the NCDRC have ruled in multiple cases that the agent is the insurer's representative. Demand the original signed proposal form and point to the agent's role in your reply letter.
Not on its own. Family history is the health record of your parents and siblings. It is not your personal medical record. Unless you yourself had been diagnosed with the same condition, the insurer cannot reject a claim solely on the basis of family history that was not asked or was not answered fully.
No. Hospital admission forms are filled in haste, often by a relative, and are not contemporaneous medical evidence of past disease. The insurer must produce a doctor's prescription, signed physician note or diagnostic report from before the policy was bought to back its position.
A vague or compound proposal question (for example, “have you ever had any disease or disorder?”) is read in favour of the policyholder. This rule is called contra proferentem. The drafter of the contract bears the cost of unclear language. Quote this rule in your reply letter.
Yes. The Insurance Ombudsman is free to approach. There is no court fee or filing fee. The Ombudsman handles claims up to ₹50 lakh and the award is binding on the insurer but not on the policyholder. The SLA is 30 days from receipt of the complaint. File online at the cioins complaint portal.
Yes. The Ombudsman is one route. You can also file a direct consumer complaint via edaakhil or in person at the District Commission. The consumer route allows compensation for mental agony in addition to the claim amount. Choose Ombudsman for speed and consumer court for compensation depth.
Part of the Health Insurance Claim Recovery Series by RightToInformation.Wiki.
Last reviewed by RTI Wiki editorial team on 2026-05-16.