When your Postal Life Insurance (PLI) or Rural Postal Life Insurance (RPLI) policy completes its full term, you can claim the maturity value from the Department of Posts. This guide explains the exact form to fill, the documents you need, what to do if your policy bond is lost, and how to escalate if the payment is delayed.
Quick answer: Fill the maturity claim form available at your post office or on the PLI portal, attach your original policy bond (or a Letter of Indemnity if it is lost), and submit it at any Head, Sub or Branch Post Office. The office forwards it to the Postmaster General or Head of Division, who checks your title and orders payment of the sum assured plus bonus. If the payment is delayed, complain through the India Post complaint portal or CPGRAMS.
Postal Life Insurance and Rural Postal Life Insurance are both run by the Department of Posts (India Post), Government of India. You do not deal with a private insurer. Your policy is serviced through the post office network and the PLI customer portal at https://pli.indiapost.gov.in.
A maturity claim is the money you receive when the policy runs its full agreed term. The amount is the sum assured plus accrued bonus, less any premium still due with interest. This differs from a surrender or a paid-up policy, explained near the end of this guide.
Requirements can vary by policy type, so confirm the exact list with your post office before you submit.
You can still claim maturity if the original policy bond is lost, misplaced or torn. In that case you submit a Letter of Indemnity (a personal bond of indemnity) in place of the original bond. This is a written promise on stamp paper that protects the Department if the original bond ever turns up. Ask your post office which stamp-paper value to use and for the correct indemnity format, because the office issues the prescribed form.
If your maturity money does not arrive in a reasonable time, do not just wait. Escalate in order:
Always keep copies of your claim form, acknowledgement, and every complaint reference. They make follow-up far easier.
These three terms are easy to confuse, so here is the plain difference.
For anything you are unsure about, ask your post office to confirm against your specific plan and policy.
Find your original policy bond now, even before the maturity date, so you are not searching for it later. Check that your bank or post office account is active and linked. If you ever need to push a government office for records or a status update, the right-to-information route can help, and you can learn the full method in The RTI Playbook.
Use the maturity claim form for a Postal or Rural Postal Life Insurance policy, available at any post office or on the PLI portal at https://pli.indiapost.gov.in. Ask for the maturity (survival) claim form by name rather than a form number.
You can submit at any Divisional Office, Head Post Office, Sub Post Office or Branch Post Office. The office forwards your application to the Postmaster General or Head of Division, who orders the payment if the claim is admissible.
You can still claim. Submit a Letter of Indemnity (a personal bond of indemnity) on stamp paper in place of the lost original bond. Ask your post office for the correct format and the stamp-paper value to use.
India Post states that claims are settled as per set norms promptly, but no fixed day-count is published here. Ask your post office for the expected timeline for your case and keep your acknowledgement to follow up.
You receive the sum assured plus any accrued bonus, less any premium still in arrears and the interest on it. So the final amount can differ slightly from the headline sum assured if dues are outstanding.
First chase your post office and call the PLI helpline 1800 266 6868. If that fails, file a complaint on the India Post portal at https://crm.indiapost.gov.in, and escalate unresolved cases to CPGRAMS at https://pgportal.gov.in.
Yes. PLI and RPLI are run by the Department of Posts, not a private insurer. You claim through the post office network and the PLI portal, and you escalate through India Post and the government grievance system.
Maturity is payment when the policy completes its full term. Surrender is closing the policy early for cash, which is generally not allowed before 36 months and is not available for some plans like AEA and Children policies.
Reviewed by Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak.