If your fire insurance claim has been reported, even surveyed, but the insurer keeps sitting on the decision or payment past the settlement timeline, here is a calm weekend plan to push it through.
Reviewed on: 2026-05-29.
When a fire claim has been surveyed but the insurer keeps dragging the decision past the settlement timeline, your job is to put the delay and the interest demand in writing.
Quick answer
If you have reported a fire insurance claim — for a home, shop, factory, godown, stock or property — and the insurer has gone past its claim-settlement timeline without paying or giving you a clear written decision, the first move is to put the delay on the record in writing. Email or write to the insurer, quote your claim and policy numbers, give the date of loss, the date you intimated, and the date the surveyor inspected or submitted the report, and ask them to either settle the claim or give written reasons for any deduction or rejection. Make the point that the matter is past the settlement timeline set under IRDAI's policyholder-protection regulations, and that delay beyond that timeline attracts interest at the rate fixed in those regulations — so you are also claiming interest for the period of delay.
If the written demand does not move the file, you escalate — not with RTI first, but through the insurance grievance chain: the insurer's Grievance Redressal Officer (GRO), then IRDAI's Bima Bharosa portal, then the Insurance Ombudsman, and a consumer complaint on e-Daakhil if needed. RTI helps only in a narrow case: when a public-sector (government) general insurer holds your file, you can use RTI to find out when the survey report was received and why settlement is still pending. RTI does not reach a private insurer, and it never forces a payout.
This guide is for you if your fire claim is past the stage of being reported and inspected, but the insurer has not settled it within the timeline. Common situations:
Fix the dates and pull your file together — a delay case is won or lost on a clean timeline. Find your claim intimation proof and note the exact date of loss, the date you reported it, and the date the surveyor inspected the loss or submitted the report, plus your claim and policy numbers.
Put the delay and your interest demand on the record. Write to the insurer's claims team (and your agent or broker, if any) asking them to settle the surveyed claim, with interest for the delay, or give written reasons. Use the template below; keep it calm and factual.
Read your policy and plan the escalation so Monday is decisive. Go through your policy's claim, settlement and grievance clauses, and get ready to move up the chain if the reply is vague or absent.
| Document or evidence | Why it matters / where to get it |
|---|---|
| Claim intimation proof | The email, SMS, call reference or portal acknowledgement that shows the date you reported the fire loss — this fixes when the claim clock started and that you intimated in time. |
| Policy schedule and wording | Your policy shows your claim and policy numbers, the sum insured, the cover and the claim and settlement conditions, including how grievances are handled. |
| Survey report or surveyor's inspection note | If you have it, the survey report is central; it shows the loss was inspected and assessed, which means the insurer's settlement clock has started running. If you don't have it, demand a copy. |
| FIR and fire-brigade report | For a fire loss the fire-service report and, where relevant, the police FIR are key proof of the event; keep copies and note their numbers and dates. |
| Proof of loss and value of stock or property | Bills, stock registers, purchase invoices, valuation or repair estimates and dated photos that support the amount you are claiming and the scale of the loss. |
| List of documents already submitted, with dates | A simple list of everything the insurer has already received from you shows that nothing is genuinely pending at your end and that the delay is theirs. |
| All correspondence with the insurer | Every email, SMS, call log, agent or broker message and portal screenshot, with dates — this is the trail that proves the claim was surveyed yet kept waiting past the timeline. |
| A short dated timeline you write yourself | A one-page sequence — loss, intimation, survey, report, your follow-ups, the missed settlement — keeps your case clear at every later level. |
| Step | Who to approach | How to reach them | Typical timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| Insurer claims team | The general insurer (or your agent/broker) handling your fire claim | Written email demanding settlement or written reasons, with interest for the delay, quoting claim and policy numbers; ask for a reference | First reply usually in a few days to a couple of weeks |
| Insurer's Grievance Redressal Officer | The GRO named in your policy and on the insurer's website | Email or letter escalating the surveyed-but-unsettled delay, with your timeline, evidence and interest claim | A couple of weeks |
| IRDAI Bima Bharosa | Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India grievance portal | Register at bimabharosa.irdai.gov.in and keep the token to track it | As per the portal's published timeline |
| Insurance Ombudsman | Office of the Insurance Ombudsman for your area | File through cioins.co.in within the limit set by the Insurance Ombudsman Rules; free for policyholders | A few weeks to a few months |
| National Consumer Helpline | Department of Consumer Affairs helpline | Register at consumerhelpline.gov.in, the UMANG app, or by phone | A few days to acknowledge; mediation varies |
| Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission | District or State Consumer Commission | File online on e-Daakhil at edaakhil.nic.in with your full evidence and an interest claim | Varies by location and case load |
Adapt the bracketed parts. Keep a copy of everything you send.
Subject: Fire claim past settlement timeline — request to settle with interest, claim no. [claim number], policy no. [policy number] (Insured: [name])
To: The Claims Team / Grievance Redressal Officer [Insurance company name] (copy to agent/broker [name], if any) Subject: Fire claim no. [claim number] under policy no. [policy number] is past the settlement timeline — request to settle with interest, or give written reasons Dear Sir / Madam, I am the policyholder/insured under the above fire policy. I intimated a claim for the fire loss described below. The loss has been inspected/surveyed, but the claim has not been settled and I have not received a clear written decision, even though the matter is now past the claim-settlement timeline. Claim details: - Policy number: [policy number] - Claim / intimation number: [claim number] - Date of loss (fire): [date] - Date I intimated the claim: [date], by [email / phone / portal], reference [reference if any] - Date the surveyor inspected the loss: [date] - Date the survey report was submitted (if known): [date] - Nature and place of loss: fire damage to [home / shop / factory / godown / stock / property] at [address] All documents asked for have been submitted (list and dates attached). Despite this and my follow-ups on [dates], the claim remains unsettled past the settlement timeline set under IRDAI's policyholder-protection regulations. I request you to: 1) Settle the admitted claim without further delay, and pay interest for the period of delay at the rate fixed in IRDAI's regulations. 2) If any deduction or rejection is proposed, give me the written reasons and a copy of the survey report and the basis of assessment. 3) Acknowledge this email with a reference number. I am attaching my claim intimation proof, the policy schedule, the FIR and fire-brigade report, proof of loss and value, the list of documents already submitted with dates, and a short timeline of intimation, survey and my follow-ups. If the claim is not settled within a reasonable time, I will be constrained to escalate to your Grievance Redressal Officer, IRDAI's Bima Bharosa portal, the Insurance Ombudsman, and, if necessary, the Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission, and to claim interest and costs for the delay. Thank you. Name: [your name] Policy number: [policy number] Claim/intimation number: [claim number] Mobile: [number] Email: [email] Date: [date]
RTI is useful here only in a narrow situation — when a public authority holds your record — and even then it is an evidence and pressure tool, not a way to force a payout. The real opening is:
These answers carry real weight at the Grievance Redressal Officer, the Insurance Ombudsman or a consumer commission, because they show, in the insurer's own records, when the report came in and how long the file has sat unsettled — which is exactly the delay you are complaining about, and the basis for your interest claim.
For the most common situation — a private general insurer handling your fire claim — RTI does not apply, because a private insurer is not a public authority under the RTI Act. You cannot RTI a private insurer for your claim file, and RTI will never compel anyone to settle your claim or pay interest. It is also not much use to RTI the regulator IRDAI for your case: IRDAI is a public authority, but it does not hold your individual claim file or the settlement decision.
For a private fire-insurance dispute, use the insurance grievance chain instead: a written demand to the insurer's claims team to settle or give reasons, then the insurer's Grievance Redressal Officer, then IRDAI's Bima Bharosa portal (bimabharosa.irdai.gov.in), and then the Insurance Ombudsman (cioins.co.in), which is free for policyholders. Because insurance is a paid service, a clear case of delay or deficiency can also go to the Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission via e-Daakhil (edaakhil.nic.in), or be logged with the National Consumer Helpline (consumerhelpline.gov.in). CPGRAMS (pgportal.gov.in) is for government departments and public-sector bodies — it fits a public-sector insurer, not a purely private one.
Put the delay in writing. Email the insurer's claims team, quote your claim and policy numbers and the key dates — loss, intimation, survey and report — and ask them to settle the claim or give written reasons for any deduction. Say the claim is past the settlement timeline and that you are claiming interest for the delay. Ask for a reference number. Keep all your proof and follow-ups in one dated folder.
IRDAI's policyholder-protection regulations set timelines for survey and settlement, but they are revised from time to time, so check the current limits on the official portal rather than relying on an old figure. What matters for you is to record the delay in writing, show the loss was already surveyed, and escalate up the grievance chain if the insurer keeps you waiting without a clear reason.
Yes. Where the insurer settles a claim beyond the timeline in IRDAI's regulations, interest is payable for the period of delay at the rate fixed in those regulations. Claim it in your first written demand and again at every escalation level. The Insurance Ombudsman and a consumer commission can also award interest, so keep your timeline clean to show exactly how long the delay ran.
No. RTI never compels a payout, and against a private insurer it does not even apply. RTI only gives you information, and only from a public authority. To actually get a stuck claim moving, use the insurer's claims team and Grievance Redressal Officer, IRDAI's Bima Bharosa portal, the Insurance Ombudsman, and, if needed, a consumer commission via e-Daakhil.
Only when a public body holds the record. If your policy is with a public-sector (government) general insurer, you can file an RTI for the date the survey report was received, the claim-file notings on why settlement is pending, and any internal approval outstanding. That proves the delay in the insurer's own records, which strengthens your complaint at the Ombudsman or a consumer forum. It does not order payment by itself.
Send the documents once more in writing and state clearly that all of them were already submitted on the listed dates, attaching your dated list. This stops the insurer from blaming the delay on missing papers. If the demands continue without a decision, treat it as a delaying tactic, record it on your timeline, and escalate to the Grievance Redressal Officer and Bima Bharosa.
If a surveyor has never inspected your fire loss, your first problem is the missing inspection, not the settlement delay. Sort that out first using the guide on a fire insurance survey being delayed, then come back here once the loss has been assessed and the claim is stuck past the settlement timeline. This guide is for the stage after the survey, when the decision or payment is dragging.
Keep your claim intimation proof, the policy schedule and wording, the survey report if you have it, the FIR and fire-brigade report, proof of loss and value such as bills and stock registers, a dated list of documents already submitted, all correspondence with the insurer, and a short dated timeline. These are needed at every escalation level and before the Ombudsman or a consumer commission.