If your personal accident claim does not appear on the insurer's portal or app, here is a calm weekend plan to prove you filed it and get it registered in writing.
Reviewed on: 2026-05-29.
When your personal accident claim does not appear on the insurer's portal, your first job is to prove you filed it and get the registration confirmed in writing.
Quick answer
If you have filed a personal accident claim — for an accidental injury, disability or death, on a standalone accident policy, a policy rider, or a scheme like the bank-linked Pradhan Mantri Suraksha Bima Yojana (PMSBY) — and it does not show up on the insurer's portal or app, do not panic and do not refile blindly. The portal is only a display screen. What matters legally is whether you intimated the claim and whether the insurer registered it. So your first move is to find your proof of intimation — the acknowledgement, email, SMS, branch receipt or token — and then ask the insurer in writing to confirm the claim is registered, give you the claim number, and tell you its status off-portal. Often the claim is registered under a different number, sits unregistered at the bank or branch that was meant to forward it, or is simply not syncing to the app.
If the insurer cannot confirm registration or stays silent, 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 body holds part of your record — a public-sector (government) general insurer, LIC for an accident rider, a PSU bank that was supposed to forward your PMSBY claim, or ESIC for an employment accident. RTI proves whether and when your claim was registered or forwarded; it never forces a payout.
This guide is for you if you filed a personal accident claim and it is not visible in the insurer's portal, app, customer login or status tracker. Common situations:
Fix the facts and find your proof first. The whole case turns on showing that you intimated the claim — so gather every scrap that proves you filed.
Put the missing claim on the record in writing. Email the insurer's claims team (and the bank branch, if your claim was filed through a scheme like PMSBY) and ask them to confirm registration and share the claim status. Use the template below; stay calm and factual.
Pull your file together and plan the escalation. Read your policy on how to intimate and pursue an accident claim, and get ready to move up the chain if Monday's reply is vague.
| Document or evidence | Why it matters / where to get it |
|---|---|
| Proof you intimated the claim | The acknowledgement, email, SMS, portal screenshot, branch or bank receipt, courier slip or call reference — this is the single most important paper, because it proves you filed and fixes the date. |
| Policy schedule or certificate | Shows your policy number, the cover, who is insured and the nominee. For a scheme like PMSBY, keep the enrolment confirmation or the bank's auto-debit entry showing you were covered. |
| Claim or token number, if given | Note any reference the insurer or app gave you when you filed; it helps them trace a claim that is registered under a different number or stuck in their system. |
| FIR or police report (where relevant) | For road, rail or similar accidents, drowning or any accident involving a crime, the police report is usually required; keep a copy and note its number and date. |
| Hospital, disability or death records | Discharge summary, disability certificate from the competent authority, or the death certificate and post-mortem — these are the core proofs the insurer needs once the claim is traced. |
| Bank passbook or account statement page | Accident claim payouts are credited to a bank account, so the first pages of the passbook or a statement showing account details are usually part of the claim file. |
| All correspondence with the insurer and bank | Every email, SMS, call log, agent message and portal screenshot, with dates — this trail proves you filed and chased while the claim stayed invisible online. |
| A short dated timeline you write yourself | A one-page sequence — accident, intimation, the reference you got, your follow-ups, the 'not found' screens — keeps your case clear at every later level. |
| Step | Who to approach | How to reach them | Typical timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| Insurer claims team | The insurer (or the bank branch, for a bank-linked scheme like PMSBY) where you filed the claim | Written email asking to confirm registration, the claim number and the status, quoting policy and accident details; ask for a reference | First reply usually in a few days to a couple of weeks |
| Bank branch (for scheme claims) | The branch that took your PMSBY claim-cum-discharge form | Written request asking whether and when they forwarded your claim to the insurer, with the date | 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 unregistered or invisible claim, with your proof of intimation and timeline | 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 |
| 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: Personal accident claim not showing on portal — please confirm registration and status (Policy no. [policy number], Insured: [name])
To: The Claims Team / Grievance Redressal Officer [Insurance company name] (copy to bank branch [branch name] and agent/broker [name], if any) Subject: My personal accident claim is not visible on your portal/app — request to confirm registration, claim number and status under policy no. [policy number] Dear Sir / Madam, I am the policyholder/insured (or nominee/claimant) under the above policy. I intimated a personal accident claim, but it does not appear on your portal/app and I am unable to verify its status online. Claim details: - Policy / certificate number: [policy number] - Scheme (if any): [e.g. standalone accident policy / rider / PMSBY through bank] - Date of accident: [date] - Date I intimated the claim: [date], by [app / website / branch / bank / agent / toll-free], reference [reference if any] - Claim / token number given to me (if any): [number] - Nature of claim: [accidental injury / disability / death] - Insured person: [name] Despite my intimation and follow-ups on [dates], the claim is not showing as registered on your portal/app, and the status check returns no record / an invalid reference. I have not refiled, to avoid creating a duplicate. I request you to: 1) Confirm in writing whether my claim is registered, and under which claim number. 2) Tell me the current status and any document still pending from me. 3) If it was to be forwarded by my bank branch under a scheme, confirm whether and when it was received by you. 4) Acknowledge this email with a reference number. I am attaching my proof of intimation, the policy/enrolment details, the accident and medical/police records, and a short dated timeline of my intimation and follow-ups. If my claim cannot be confirmed as registered 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. Thank you. Name: [your name] Policy number: [policy number] Claim/token number (if any): [number] Mobile: [number] Email: [email] Date: [date]
RTI is useful here only in a narrow situation — when a public authority holds part of your record — and even then it is an evidence and pressure tool, not a way to force a payout. The real openings are:
These answers carry real weight at the Grievance Redressal Officer, the Insurance Ombudsman or a consumer commission, because they show, in the public body's own records, exactly where your claim went missing.
For the most common situation — a private insurer's portal or app not showing your 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 register or pay your claim. 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 record.
For a private accident-insurance problem, use the insurance grievance chain instead: a written request to the insurer's claims team to confirm registration and status, 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 deficiency or a lost claim 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 PSU bank or a public-sector insurer, not a purely private one.
No. Not showing on the portal is not the same as rejected. It usually means the claim is not registered yet, is registered under a different number, is stuck at a bank or branch that should have forwarded it, or is simply not syncing to the app. Your proof of intimation is what counts. Ask the insurer in writing to confirm whether the claim is registered and under what number.
Find your proof that you filed — the acknowledgement, email, SMS, branch receipt, screenshot or call reference, with the date. Then email the insurer (and the bank branch, for a scheme like PMSBY) asking them to confirm whether the claim is registered, give you the claim number, and state the status. Ask them to acknowledge with a reference. Do not refile blindly, or you may create a confusing duplicate.
Be careful. Refiling can create two part-filled claims and slow everything down. First get the existing claim traced and confirmed. If the insurer genuinely has no record at all, then file again in writing, refer to your earlier intimation date, and keep both acknowledgements. Never quietly change the accident date or details between filings, as mismatches can hurt the claim later.
Under PMSBY, the accident claim is given to your bank branch, which forwards it to the insurer. If nothing shows, the gap is often at that hand-off. Ask the branch in writing whether and when they forwarded your claim-cum-discharge form to the insurer, and get that in writing. If the bank is a public-sector bank, RTI can also confirm whether and when your claim was forwarded.
No. RTI never compels registration or payment, and against a private insurer it does not even apply. RTI only gives you information, and only from a public authority. To get your claim registered, 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 part of your record. If a PSU bank was meant to forward your PMSBY claim, or a public-sector general insurer, LIC or ESIC is involved, you can file an RTI asking whether and when your claim was registered or forwarded, the claim number, and the file notings. That proves where the claim went missing, which strengthens your complaint at the Ombudsman or a consumer forum.
There are timelines for acknowledging and processing claims under IRDAI's policyholder-protection rules, but they are revised from time to time, so check the current limits on the official portal rather than an old figure. What matters for you is to record your request in writing, follow up, and escalate up the grievance chain if the insurer keeps you waiting without a clear answer.
Keep your proof of intimation, the policy or PMSBY enrolment details, any claim or token number, the FIR or police report where relevant, the hospital, disability or death records, the bank passbook page, all correspondence with the insurer and bank, and a short dated timeline. These are needed at every escalation level and before the Ombudsman or a consumer commission.