Cashless Health Insurance Denied at Hospital: What to Do Immediately

If the hospital says cashless is denied or pending at admission or discharge, ask immediately for a written denial or query letter and note whether the call came from the hospital, the TPA, or the insurer. While you wait, email the insurer and TPA together, keep every bill and document, and pay only under protest so you can claim full reimbursement later.

Part of the Health Insurance Claim Recovery Series by RightToInformation.Wiki.

The cashless desk at a hospital is one of the most stressful places in Indian healthcare. A family member is on a bed, the bill is climbing every hour, and somebody behind a counter just said the words “cashless not approved”. Most families freeze, call relatives, and end up paying the full bill without understanding that cashless denial is not the same as claim rejection. This guide is the calm, step-by-step action plan for those 30 minutes at the billing desk and the 7 days after discharge.

It assumes nothing about your policy. It works whether you have a corporate group health plan, a retail Mediclaim policy, a senior citizen plan, or a top-up. The same playbook applies to admission denials, discharge stalls, and partial approvals. You do not need a lawyer at this stage. You need paperwork, polite firmness, and the IRDAI escalation ladder.

A useful mental shift before you start. The hospital insurance desk is not the decision maker, even when it speaks in absolute terms. The TPA is not the decision maker either, even when it issues the denial letter. The insurer is legally responsible for every cashless and reimbursement decision. The Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI) regulates that insurer. The Insurance Ombudsman supervises both. When you frame your emails and complaints with that hierarchy in mind, the right escalation address becomes obvious and you stop wasting energy arguing with a billing clerk who has no authority to clear your file.

What this means in simple words

Cashless means the insurer pays the network hospital directly under a pre-agreed tariff, and you only sign the bill. There is no out-of-pocket payment apart from any policy excess, sub-limit overflow, or non-medical items.

When the hospital insurance desk uses the word “denied”, it can mean three very different things, and the first job at the counter is to find out which one is happening.

  • Hospital said no. The hospital may not be in the insurer network for that specific policy, or its package rate is not agreed with the TPA. The insurer has not even seen the case.
  • TPA raised a query. The Third Party Administrator that processes claims for the insurer has asked for more documents or clarification. This is a pause, not a refusal.
  • Insurer formally refused. The insurer, after reviewing the documents, has issued a written denial under a specific policy clause.

Each one needs a different reply. Treat them the same way and you lose money you did not have to.

A denial at admission is not a rejection of your claim. You can still pay the bill, take discharge, collect the documents, and file a reimbursement claim within the policy timeline (usually 7 to 30 days). Reimbursement does not need cashless approval. Many families do not know this and accept the denial as final.

The IRDAI Master Circular on Health Insurance Business dated 29 May 2024 mandates that the insurer take a cashless decision within 1 hour at admission and 3 hours at discharge. Anything beyond that is a regulatory breach you can escalate.

A second useful distinction. “Denied” and “declined” are not legal terms. The policy and the IRDAI rules talk about repudiation (the insurer's formal refusal in writing, citing a clause) and query (a request for more information). A staff member at the counter saying “denied” in the middle of a busy night does not amount to repudiation. Repudiation only exists when an insurer issues a written, dated, signed communication that quotes the specific policy clause. Until then, the file is technically open and your job is to keep pushing on the open file rather than fighting an imaginary final decision.

Immediate steps (30 minutes at the billing desk)

Work through these steps in order. Do not skip the writing parts. Verbal answers vanish later.

  1. Ask in writing who denied. Walk to the hospital insurance desk and ask, “Is this denial from the hospital, the TPA, or the insurer?”. Ask them to note the answer on hospital letterhead, even one line, with date, time, and the staff name. Most desks will write this if you stay polite.
  2. Demand the written denial or query letter. The TPA sends every query or denial by email to the hospital. Ask for a printed copy. A phone call is not enough. If the desk says “TPA only called”, ask them to email the TPA right then asking for the written letter.
  3. Call both helplines. Call the insurer toll-free number on the back of your health card. Then call the TPA toll-free number. Note date, time, ticket or reference number, and the agent name on a fresh page. Mention you will follow up by email.
  4. Send a single combined email. From your personal email, write one email to the insurer grievance officer, with the TPA and the hospital insurance desk in copy, and yourself in bcc. Subject: Cashless denied, Policy [number], Patient [name], request written reasons. Attach the pre-auth form, the Key Feature Document (KFD), and a photo of the health card and Aadhaar. The email format is below.
  5. Ask the hospital to keep cashless pending. Many hospitals will hold the cashless file open for a few hours if the family asks politely and shows that an email has gone to the insurer. The discharge can wait while the case is escalated. Avoid raising voices, but be firm.
  6. Pay under protest if you must pay. If the discharge cannot wait, pay the bill but write on the receipt “Paid under protest pending cashless decision”. Ask the cashier to sign or stamp that note. Photograph the receipt before you leave. This single line keeps the legal door open for full reimbursement.
  7. Collect every document. Before you step out of the hospital, collect the full discharge summary, ICP (in-patient case papers), all original bills, duplicates, pharmacy bills, prescriptions, lab and investigation reports, the doctor's certificate of medical necessity, and the implant invoice if any. Check page numbers. Missing pages are the most common reason for reimbursement rejection.
  8. Save every TPA message. Screenshot every SMS, WhatsApp message, and email from the TPA. Send them to your own email so they survive a lost phone.
  9. File reimbursement within 7 days. Most policies allow 7 to 30 days for reimbursement after discharge. File within 7 days while documents are fresh. Reimbursement does not require cashless approval. Use the standard claim form and the same documents.
  10. Escalate if rejected. If reimbursement is also rejected or stays silent beyond 30 days, climb the complaint ladder below. Do not wait. The IRDAI clock starts from your first written grievance.

Documents to collect

Documents checklist

Policy copy + KFD, health card, hospital pre-auth form, hospital bills (original + duplicate), discharge summary, ICP, prescriptions, lab and investigation reports, pharmacy bills, TPA query / denial letter, TPA emails, insurer emails, payment receipts (mark “paid under protest”), claim form (acknowledged), Aadhaar + PAN, doctor's certificate of medical necessity, FIR if accident.

Keep every original. Take three sets of photocopies. Scan everything into a single PDF on your phone so you can email the file from a hospital car park if you need to.

What to ask the insurer or TPA in writing

When you email or hand a letter to the hospital insurance desk, the TPA, or the insurer grievance officer, your specific demands should be:

  • “Send the exact denial reason quoting the policy clause and section number.”
  • “Confirm in writing whether this is a final denial or only a query.”
  • “Confirm whether reimbursement is allowed for this admission, even if cashless is denied.”
  • “Provide the TPA ticket number and the claim ID for tracking.”
  • “Confirm compliance with the IRDAI Master Circular dated 29 May 2024 timeline of 1 hour at admission and 3 hours at discharge.”
  • “Share the proposal form copy on record if pre-existing disease is the stated reason.”
  • “Provide the name and email of the insurer's Grievance Redressal Officer (GRO) as listed at policyholder.gov.in.”

If the insurer or TPA refuses any of these in writing, that refusal itself becomes evidence in your IRDAI Bima Bharosa complaint and later before the Insurance Ombudsman.

Sample email format

Copy this email, fill the bracketed fields, and send from your registered email address.

Subject: Cashless denial, Policy [POLICY NUMBER], Patient [NAME], request written reasons

To: [Insurer Grievance Officer email]
Cc: [TPA email], [Hospital insurance desk email]
Bcc: [Your own email]

Dear Sir / Madam,

This is regarding cashless approval for [Patient Name] admitted at [Hospital Name] on [date] for [diagnosis]. The hospital insurance desk says cashless has been denied. I request the following in writing within 24 hours.

1. Whether the denial is from the hospital, the TPA, or the insurer.
2. The exact reason quoting the relevant policy clause and section.
3. Whether the case is a final denial or a query.
4. Whether reimbursement will be admissible for the admission.
5. The TPA ticket and claim ID.
6. Confirmation of compliance with the IRDAI Master Circular on Health Insurance dated 29 May 2024, which requires a cashless decision within 1 hour at admission and 3 hours at discharge.

Policy number: [POLICY NUMBER]
TPA card number: [CARD NUMBER]
Admission date and time: [DATE AND TIME]
Diagnosis: [BRIEF]
Hospital: [HOSPITAL NAME AND ADDRESS]

Please respond by email within 24 hours. I am paying under protest and shall convert this to a reimbursement claim if cashless is finally denied. A copy of this email is being preserved for the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India grievance portal at [[https://bimabharosa.irdai.gov.in|bimabharosa.irdai.gov.in]] and the Insurance Ombudsman at [[https://www.cioins.co.in|cioins.co.in]] if needed.

Regards,
[Your Name]
[Phone] [Email]

This single email puts the insurer on notice, starts the 15 working day grievance clock under IRDAI rules, and creates a paper trail that the Ombudsman will treat as your Tier-1 attempt.

When to escalate

Move up the complaint ladder when any of these is true:

  • The TPA or insurer does not respond within 24 hours of your written email.
  • The hospital is unhelpful while the insurer says “speak to the hospital”, or vice versa, and nobody owns the case.
  • The reason for denial does not match any clause in your policy schedule or KFD.
  • The insurer asks you to pay first and “we will refund”, without putting that promise in writing.
  • Cashless decision is not taken within the IRDAI timeline of 1 hour at admission or 3 hours at discharge.
  • The TPA query keeps changing every time you respond, classic moving target behaviour.
  • The hospital asks you to sign a no-claim undertaking just to get discharge.

You do not need to wait until discharge to start escalating. You can file an IRDAI Bima Bharosa complaint from the hospital waiting room on your phone. The portal is mobile-friendly.

Complaint route

Complaint route:

Hospital insurance desk or TPA desk → Insurer grievance officer (15 working days) → IRDAI Bima Bharosa portal (bimabharosa.irdai.gov.in, 15 working days) → Insurance Ombudsman (cioins.co.in, 30-day SLA, free, claim up to Rs 50 lakh, binding on insurer) → Consumer court via edaakhil or consumer court

IRDAI toll-free numbers are 155255 and 1800-4254-732. Email is [email protected]. The IRDAI grievance page is irdai.gov.in/grievance-redressal-mechanism1 and IGMS legacy access is irdai.gov.in/igms1. The Insurance Ombudsman procedure is documented at cioins.co.in Procedure and complaints can be filed at cioins.co.in Complaint.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Paying without writing “paid under protest” on the receipt. The phrase is small but matters.
  • Trusting verbal phone-call statements from the TPA or insurer. Always demand email or a written letter.
  • Losing the discharge summary or ICP. These are the most valuable documents in any later complaint.
  • Filing a reimbursement claim without all bills, ICP, and discharge summary. Incomplete files get rejected almost automatically.
  • Waiting more than 7 days after discharge to file reimbursement. Many policies have strict windows.
  • Not asking which entity denied, hospital, TPA, or insurer. Each needs a different fix.
  • Signing a hospital “no-claim” undertaking just to get discharge. That signature can be quoted against you later.
  • Forgetting to email yourself a copy of all communications. Phones get lost in hospital chaos.
  • Believing that cashless denial closes the claim. Reimbursement is a separate, independent right.
  • Threatening hospital staff or refusing to pay. Stay polite. The complaint is against the insurer, not the hospital, in most cases.

FAQs

Is cashless denial the same as claim rejection?

No. Cashless denial only means the insurer has refused to pay the hospital directly under the network arrangement at that moment. You retain the right to pay out of pocket, take discharge, collect documents, and file a reimbursement claim. The insurer must then take a fresh decision on reimbursement on its own merits. If the insurer rejects reimbursement too, that is a separate written decision and the IRDAI ladder starts there.

Can I still claim reimbursement after cashless is denied?

Yes. Reimbursement is an independent right under your policy. You file the claim form, attach the full document set, and submit within the policy window (commonly 7 to 30 days from discharge). The insurer must review on documents and reply in writing. Many cashless denials are overturned at the reimbursement stage when full medical records are seen.

What is the IRDAI timeline for cashless decision?

The IRDAI Master Circular on Health Insurance Business dated 29 May 2024 requires the insurer to take an authorisation decision within 1 hour of the cashless request at admission and a final approval within 3 hours at discharge. Delays beyond these windows are a clear ground for an IRDAI Bima Bharosa complaint and, in some cases, attract interest under the same circular.

The hospital says my policy is not in their network. What now?

Confirm in writing. Ask the hospital to email the TPA in your presence to check the network status. If the hospital is genuinely not in the network for your policy, you have two options. Either shift the patient to a confirmed network hospital if medically safe, or stay where you are, pay the bill, and file a reimbursement claim. Network status does not affect reimbursement eligibility.

TPA says insurer denied, but insurer says TPA decided. Who is right?

The insurer is legally responsible. The TPA is only an outsourced processor. Send your written grievance to the insurer's Grievance Redressal Officer (GRO) listed at policyholder.gov.in and mark the TPA in copy. The insurer cannot hide behind the TPA. The IRDAI Bima Bharosa portal also treats the insurer as the answering party.

Can I file a complaint while I am still in hospital?

Yes. The IRDAI Bima Bharosa portal at bimabharosa.irdai.gov.in is mobile-friendly and accepts complaints from any device. You can call the toll-free 155255 while still in the hospital waiting area and lodge a complaint. This often prompts the TPA to call the hospital within hours.

Is Bima Bharosa free?

Yes. The IRDAI Bima Bharosa portal is free. The Insurance Ombudsman is also free. Consumer commission filing via edaakhil.nic.in is free for claims below Rs 5 lakh and has a modest fee above that. You do not need a lawyer at any of these stages, though one can help in consumer court.

Should I pay the full bill or only the deposit?

Pay what is required for discharge, no more. If the hospital insists on the full bill, pay under protest and keep the receipt. If they accept only the deposit while keeping cashless under review, that is the better outcome. Never pay extra “to be safe”. You can always pay more later, you cannot easily get a refund.

Can I switch hospitals if cashless is denied?

Medically, only if it is safe. If the patient is stable and the denial is purely administrative, you may shift to a confirmed network hospital after a fresh pre-authorisation. Do not move a critical patient just to chase cashless. Reimbursement is always available as a fallback.

What is the //"paid under protest"// wording for?

The phrase “paid under protest” on a hospital bill or receipt records that you are not accepting the denial as final and are reserving your right to claim back the amount. Without it, the insurer or a court can argue that you voluntarily paid, which weakens your refund case. Write the words in your own hand, sign, and date.

What if the hospital makes me sign a no-claim undertaking?

Refuse politely if you can. If they insist before they will discharge, write “signed without prejudice to my reimbursement claim under the policy” above your signature. That note preserves your right. Email a copy of the signed undertaking to the insurer and the TPA right away, with that protective wording quoted in the email body.

How long does Bima Bharosa take to resolve?

The IRDAI commitment is 15 working days for resolution after the insurer's grievance officer step. If the insurer ignores or gives an unsatisfactory reply, escalate to the Insurance Ombudsman, which has a 30-day window. The Ombudsman's award is binding on the insurer up to Rs 50 lakh.

Reader signal

Was this article useful?

Tap once if it helped you. These counters show other citizens which pages are worth reading.

- views