If your endowment or money-back policy has matured but the money has not reached your bank, here is a calm weekend plan to find the pending requirement, submit it, and chase the payout.
Reviewed on: 2026-05-29.
When a life-insurance maturity amount does not arrive on the due date, the fix is to find the one pending requirement that is holding your payout.
Quick answer
If a life-insurance policy has reached its maturity date but the maturity amount has not been credited to your account, the cause is almost always one missing or mismatched requirement, not a dispute over whether you are owed the money. Maturity is a certain, contractual event fixed at the start of the policy, so the delay is administrative. The usual reasons are a maturity discharge voucher or discharge form not submitted, the original policy bond not surrendered, KYC or bank details not updated (so the NEFT credit fails), a loan or assignment against the policy not cleared, a survival-benefit or premium issue, or the policy sitting at a different servicing branch from the one you contacted. The first move is to ask the insurer, in writing, for the exact pending requirement and the date your discharge was received, then close that gap and ask them to credit the amount with any delay interest due.
Whether RTI helps depends entirely on who your insurer is. RTI works only when the insurer is a public authority — Life Insurance Corporation of India (LIC), which is a statutory public-sector insurer and answers RTI, or Postal Life Insurance and Rural Postal Life Insurance, run by the Department of Posts. RTI does not reach a private life insurer, and it never forces a payout. For a private insurer, the insurance grievance chain is your real remedy.
This guide is for you if a life-insurance policy has matured but the maturity proceeds have not been paid. Common situations:
Find the exact pending requirement in writing. Open the insurer's email, SMS, branch slip, customer portal or app and look for the maturity-claim status and any line saying what is awaited.
Close the gap. Most maturity delays clear once one specific document or detail is fixed.
Draft your written representation to the insurer's servicing branch and grievance officer using the template below. Keep it calm and factual.
| Document or evidence | Why it matters / where to get it |
|---|---|
| Policy bond / policy document | The original policy is usually surrendered to release the maturity amount; it also shows your sum assured, maturity date and conditions. If lost, ask for the indemnity/lost-policy process early. |
| Maturity discharge voucher or discharge form | The signed form by which you acknowledge the maturity payout; the credit is almost never released until this reaches the servicing office. |
| Updated KYC — identity and address proof | Insurers re-verify KYC before paying. Outdated or mismatched KYC is a very common reason a maturity credit is held. |
| Cancelled cheque or bank passbook page | Provides the correct account and IFSC for the NEFT credit. A name or account mismatch is the usual cause of a bounced maturity payment. |
| Loan/assignment details against the policy | If you took a loan on the policy or assigned it to a bank, the dues or assignment must be cleared first; you need the exact closure steps in writing. |
| Maturity intimation / status from the insurer | The letter, SMS or portal status showing the maturity is due and what, if anything, is pending — this is what your representation answers. |
| Your written request and its acknowledgement | Proof of when you submitted the discharge and documents, with a reference number, so you can show the delay is on the insurer's side. |
| A short dated timeline you write yourself | A one-page sequence — maturity date, documents submitted, follow-ups, replies — keeps your case clear at every later level. |
| Step | Who to approach | How to reach them | Typical timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| Servicing branch / customer care | The branch or office that holds your policy, or the insurer's call centre | Written request or email for the exact pending requirement, with your discharge and documents; ask for a reference number | 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 unpaid matured amount, with the same evidence and your acknowledgements | A couple of weeks |
| RTI to LIC / Postal Life Insurance (public insurers only) | The Public Information Officer of LIC or the Department of Posts | File via rtionline.gov.in or the office's RTI route for your claim file and the pending requirement | As per the RTI timeline for a reply |
| 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 |
| Consumer Disputes Redressal Commission | District or State Consumer Commission | File online on e-Daakhil at edaakhil.nic.in with your full evidence | Varies by location and case load |
Adapt the bracketed parts. Keep a copy of everything you send.
Subject: Release of maturity amount — policy no. [policy number], maturity date [date] (Policyholder: [name])
To: The Branch Manager / Maturity Claims Section [Insurance company name], [servicing branch] Copy: The Grievance Redressal Officer, [Insurance company name] Subject: Request to release the maturity amount under policy no. [policy number], matured on [maturity date] Dear Sir / Madam, I am the policyholder under the above policy, which matured on [maturity date] for a maturity value of approximately [amount, if known]. The maturity proceeds have not yet been credited to my account, and I request you to release the payment. Status as I understand it: [paste the exact pending requirement / status you were given, or write "no pending requirement has been communicated to me"]. To close any pending requirement, I am submitting / enclosing: 1) The signed maturity discharge voucher / discharge form. 2) The original policy bond [or: my request for the lost-policy / indemnity procedure, as the original is misplaced]. 3) Updated KYC — [identity proof] and [address proof]. 4) A cancelled cheque / bank passbook page for account no. [account number], IFSC [IFSC], in my name, for the NEFT credit. 5) [If applicable] Details to clear the loan / assignment of [amount] against this policy, with a request to release the maturity amount net of it. I request you to: (a) credit the maturity amount to the bank account above at the earliest; (b) confirm in writing the date my discharge and documents were received; and (c) pay interest for the period the valid maturity payment has been delayed, as applicable. Kindly acknowledge this request with a reference number. If the amount is not released 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. [For an LIC or Postal Life Insurance policy: I may also file an RTI for my maturity-claim file and the pending requirement.] Name: [your name] Policy number: [policy number] Maturity date: [date] Mobile: [number] Email: [email] Date: [date]
RTI is genuinely useful here only when your insurer is a public authority, and even then as an evidence and pressure tool, not as a way to force the payout. The real openings are:
These answers carry weight because they pin down, on the record, that you are owed the amount and exactly what (if anything) is genuinely pending — which is hard for the office to keep delaying once it is in writing. RTI tells you why the money is stuck; it does not by itself release it.
For a private life insurer — for example a company that is a private or joint-venture insurer, including one where a public-sector bank is only a shareholder — RTI does not apply, because the 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 release your maturity amount.
For a private-insurer maturity delay, use the insurance grievance chain instead: a written representation to the servicing branch and 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 a life policy is a paid service, a clear case of unjustified non-payment 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). Note that CPGRAMS (pgportal.gov.in) is for government departments and public bodies — it fits LIC or Postal Life Insurance, not a purely private insurer.
Almost always because one requirement is pending, not because the money is disputed. Common holds are a missing maturity discharge voucher, the original policy bond not surrendered, outdated KYC, wrong or unverified bank details so the NEFT fails, a loan or assignment against the policy not cleared, or the file sitting at a different servicing branch. Ask the insurer, in writing, for the exact pending requirement and fix that one thing.
Confirm the maturity date and amount on your policy schedule, then ask the insurer in writing for the precise requirement still pending and the date your discharge and documents were received. Then submit the maturity discharge voucher, current KYC and a cancelled cheque matching your name, and surrender the original bond if required. That usually clears the payment.
No. RTI never compels a payout. It only gives you information, and only from a public authority. For a private insurer, RTI does not even apply. To actually get paid, use the servicing branch, the insurer's Grievance Redressal Officer, IRDAI's Bima Bharosa portal, the Insurance Ombudsman, and, if needed, a consumer commission via e-Daakhil.
RTI helps when your insurer is a public authority. If your policy is with LIC, you can RTI its Public Information Officer for your maturity-claim file, the calculation, the date your discharge was received, and the pending requirement. If it is a Postal Life Insurance or Rural PLI policy, RTI goes to the Department of Posts, and CPGRAMS also applies. It builds evidence; it does not by itself release the money.
Ask the insurer, in writing, for its lost-policy or indemnity procedure for maturity. Insurers have a standard route — usually a declaration or indemnity and basic formalities — to pay maturity when the original bond is misplaced. Start it early, so a missing bond does not become the reason the payment keeps getting deferred.
Yes, but the loan and interest are usually adjusted first. Ask the insurer in writing to confirm the outstanding loan against the policy and to release the maturity amount net of it, so the balance reaches your account. Get the closure figures and the adjusted payout in writing, and check the bank/NEFT details so the remaining amount is credited correctly.
You can ask for it. Insurers are generally expected to pay interest when a valid payout is delayed beyond the due date, so request it in writing in your representation. Do not quote a specific rate or number of days yourself; ask the insurer to confirm the interest payable, and raise it at the Grievance Redressal Officer, Bima Bharosa or the Ombudsman if it is refused.
Keep the policy bond, the signed maturity discharge voucher, your updated KYC, a cancelled cheque or passbook page, any loan or assignment details, the insurer's maturity status, and your written request with its dated acknowledgement and reference number. Also keep a short dated timeline. You need these at every escalation level and before the Ombudsman or a consumer commission.