Reviewed on: 2026-06-12.
Meera's car went under water in the Kochi monsoon. She intimated her motor insurer the same week, the surveyor inspected the car on 12 July, and the garage sent its estimate of Rs 74,500. Then silence. In September, a call to the helpline revealed the claim status: closed. No letter, no email, no SMS, no reason. If this is your situation, the answer is short. An insurer cannot lawfully close a claim without telling you why in writing, and a silently closed claim can be reopened. Demand the decision letter, set a deadline, and escalate.
Under the IRDAI policyholder protection framework of 2024, an insurer must convey its decision on a claim in writing, with reasons, within the prescribed timeline. For health claims, a rejection additionally needs the approval of the insurer's Claims Review Committee. A status field quietly flipped to “closed” satisfies none of this. In the regulator's eyes, a claim closed without a reasoned communication is not a decided claim. It is an unresolved grievance, and that works in your favour at every later forum.
Common back-office excuses you will hear, and what they are worth:
Do not call. Calls leave no trail and helplines cannot reopen claims. Email the insurer's Grievance Redressal Officer, with a copy to the claims email ID on your policy schedule.
Subject: Claim [number] closed without communication. Demand to reopen and issue a reasoned decision. Dear Grievance Redressal Officer, 1. I intimated claim [number] under policy [number] on [date]. The surveyor inspected on [date]. Estimate of Rs [amount] was submitted on [date]. 2. On [date] I learnt through [helpline/app] that the claim is marked closed. I have received no letter, email or SMS conveying any decision or reason. I have received no document requisition. 3. Closing a claim without a written, reasoned communication is contrary to the IRDAI Protection of Policyholders' Interests framework, 2024. 4. Please reopen the claim and either settle it or issue a written decision with reasons, the documents relied upon, and a copy of the surveyor's report, within 14 days. Failing this I will complain on Bima Bharosa and to the Insurance Ombudsman. [Name, policy number, registered mobile, date]
Attach your claim intimation acknowledgement and the estimate. Keep the email delivery receipt.
If 14 days pass without a meaningful reply, register a complaint on Bima Bharosa, IRDAI's grievance portal. Choose the complaint type carefully: the grievance is “claim closed without communication of decision”, not “claim rejected”. That framing forces the insurer to first produce the decision it claims to have made. Upload the reopen demand and the delivery receipt. The portal gives you a token number and pushes the complaint into the insurer's regulatory turnaround clock.
This is the part most people miss. Silent closure does not pause your deadlines.
An insurer that closes a claim quietly and answers nothing benefits every month you wait. The safe sequence: send the reopen demand now, count one month, and if there is no substantive reply you are already eligible to file before the ombudsman. Do not let the matter drift past a year while you make phone calls. The ombudsman is free, handles claims up to Rs 50 lakh, and routinely deals with exactly this pattern in motor and health claims.
National Insurance, New India Assurance, Oriental Insurance, United India Insurance and LIC are public authorities under the RTI Act. For a silently closed claim, an RTI application is a precision tool: ask for the date of the closure decision, the name and designation of the officer who approved it, the reason recorded, a copy of the surveyor's report, and proof of dispatch of any communication to you. If the records do not exist, that admission itself supports your ombudsman complaint. Start with how to file RTI online; if the CPIO stays silent too, use a first appeal. Private insurers are outside RTI, so route those through Bima Bharosa alone.
Yes. Closure is an internal status, not a legal verdict. Insurers reopen claims when a written demand shows no decision was ever communicated. The ombudsman can also direct the insurer to deal with the claim afresh.
The insurer. Ask for copies of the letters and proof of dispatch or delivery. Registered post records, email logs and SMS logs either exist or they do not.
You can ask for it in writing, and insurers are expected to share the basis of their decision. If it is withheld, say so in your Bima Bharosa complaint; it strengthens the picture of a claim decided in the dark.
Try the ombudsman first if the amount is within Rs 50 lakh. It is free and faster. The consumer route remains open for compensation claims or larger amounts, but mind its own limitation period.
Send the reopen demand anyway. A fresh representation and the insurer's response to it can give you a fresh footing, but this is exactly where the matter gets legally delicate, so consider professional advice quickly.
It can. A claim marked closed may still appear in the insurer's records as a reported claim. One more reason to force a written decision instead of letting the status stand.
This guide is part of a four-part claims series.
Download the silent claim closure reopen checklist (PDF).