Reviewed on: 2026-06-12.
Rohit, an analyst in a Gurugram fintech, paid Rs 2,400 for a consultation and a lipid panel under his company OPD benefit. He uploaded the bill to the TPA app and waited. Three weeks later the status still read “query raised”, and no one had told him why. He finally opened the claim detail and found a one-line deficiency memo: “itemised bill not attached”. The lab had given him a lump-sum receipt. He got a head-wise break-up the next day, re-uploaded it, emailed the same to the TPA with his claim number in the subject, and the money credited in eight days.
That is the pattern. A delayed OPD or diagnostic reimbursement is almost always stuck on a small deficiency, not a refusal. Find the memo, cure exactly what it asks, and push the claim back into the queue.
Log in to the TPA portal or app and find the claim by its number. Read the current status. If it says “query”, “deficiency”, or “pending documents”, open it and note the exact words. The memo usually names one specific item: an itemised bill, a signed prescription, or a stamped report. Also check your registered email, including spam and promotions, and your SMS inbox. TPAs send these memos by email or SMS and they are easy to miss. Note the date sent, because some memos give a fixed window before the claim auto-closes.
Settle this early, because it decides your escalation route. Ask HR or check the benefits handbook whether the OPD benefit sits inside an insurance policy or is a self-funded company wellness scheme.
The same TPA can run both kinds, so do not assume.
Fix exactly what the memo asks, no more and no less.
Scan in colour, in good light, as clear PDF or JPEG. Name files plainly, for example “Claim7781_Bill” and “Claim7781_Prescription”. Upload under the same claim number and email the identical set to the TPA claims address with the claim number in the subject. Save both acknowledgements. If the portal is buggy and will not accept the upload, the dated email is your proof that you responded in time.
To: HR / Employee Benefits, [Company] Cc: [TPA claims email] Subject: Delayed OPD reimbursement, Claim No. [number], Employee [name, ID] I submitted a reimbursement claim on [date] for [consultation / test] of [self / dependant], amount Rs [amount], under our group OPD benefit. The TPA raised a deficiency on [date] asking for [document]. I cured it on [date] by uploading on the portal and emailing it to [TPA email]. Acknowledgements are attached. The claim status still shows [status] and nothing has been credited, now [number] days after filing. Please ask the TPA or insurer account manager to process and credit the approved amount, and confirm the action taken. Enclosures: portal upload acknowledgement, email to TPA, deficiency memo, itemised bill, prescription and report. [Name, Employee ID, mobile, email, date]
A private TPA and a private insurer are not public authorities, so you cannot RTI them directly. RTI becomes useful only when a public authority sits in the chain.
The CPIO must reply within 30 days. That is slower than curing a deficiency on the portal, so use RTI to break a stonewall, not as your first move. See how to file RTI online and first appeals if the reply does not come.
There is no single statutory figure for OPD reimbursement timing, and it varies by policy and TPA. As a practical benchmark, chase a written confirmation if the status has not moved within a few working days of your upload, and escalate to HR if nothing changes in a couple of weeks.
An approved claim that is not credited usually means a bank-detail mismatch or a payment-batch delay. Send the TPA your cancelled cheque or correct account details and ask for the payment UTR. If it still does not credit, loop in HR.
Most OPD benefits need a prescription to link the medicine to a consultation. A pharmacy bill alone is often returned as an unsupported expense. Get the prescription from the treating doctor and attach it.
OPD limits are usually annual and do not carry over unless the policy or scheme says so. Check the benefits handbook. If the claim was within the limit at the time you incurred it, point that out, because the date of expense, not the date of processing, is what counts.
Send the TPA the dated upload acknowledgement and your email with the documents, and ask in writing to reopen the claim, since you responded within the memo window. If they refuse, escalate to HR and, if insured, to the insurer grievance officer with the same proof.
A genuine reimbursement of medical expenses you already paid is not income, so it is normally paid in full without TDS. If your payslip shows a tax effect on an OPD benefit, raise it with payroll, not the TPA, as it is a tax-treatment question, not a claim deficiency.
Download the OPD reimbursement deficiency checklist (PDF).