e-Shram Card 2 Lakh Accident Insurance: The Honest Truth
The blunt answer first: your e-Shram card does NOT automatically give you Rs 2 lakh accident insurance today. The card lists that benefit, but the real cover comes from a separate scheme called PMSBY (Pradhan Mantri Suraksha Bima Yojana), which you must opt into through your bank. If you are not enrolled in PMSBY, there is no accident payout to claim. This guide tells you the verified, real path.
What the e-Shram card actually does
The e-Shram card registers you on the national database of unorganised workers and gives you a Universal Account Number (UAN). On its own, the card is an identity and database record. The official e-Shram portal lists PMSBY among its linked social security schemes, with risk cover of “Rs. 2 lakh for accidental death and full disability and Rs. 1 lakh for partial disability.” But “linked” does not mean “automatic.” The card points you to the benefit; it does not switch the insurance on for you.
There was an early window (registrations roughly August 2021 to March 2022) when new e-Shram registrants got a free, automatic accident cover under PMSBY for a limited period. That window is now closed. So if you registered after it ended, or your free year lapsed, you have no cover unless you yourself enrolled in PMSBY.
The real scheme: PMSBY
PMSBY is a one-year personal accident insurance scheme, renewable year to year, that pays out on death or disability caused by an accident. Here are the verified figures from the official PMSBY FAQ at jansuraksha.gov.in:
- Death: Rs 2 Lakh
- Total and irrecoverable loss of both eyes, or both hands or feet, or one eye plus one hand or foot: Rs 2 Lakh
- Total and irrecoverable loss of sight of one eye, or loss of use of one hand or foot: Rs 1 Lakh
- Premium: “Rs.20/- per annum per member.”
A point many people miss: partial disability that does NOT reach those defined losses pays nothing. The official FAQ states plainly that for lesser partial disability, “No benefit will be payable.”
Who is eligible
You must be an individual savings bank or Post Office account holder, aged 18 to 70 years, with the account linked to Aadhaar. The cover year runs from 1 June to 31 May. If you hold several accounts, you can join PMSBY through one account only.
How to actually enrol (the step that turns the card promise into real cover)
- Go to the bank or Post Office where you hold a savings account.
- Ask to enrol in PMSBY and fill the enrolment / consent-cum-declaration form.
- Give consent for “auto debit” of the Rs 20 annual premium from that account. The FAQ confirms the premium “will be deducted from the account holder's bank / Post office account through 'auto debit' facility in one instalment, as per the consent given by the subscriber at the time of enrolment.”
- Name a nominee on the form. This matters hugely for a death claim later.
- Keep enough balance so the premium does not bounce. If the auto-debit fails or the account closes, the cover stops.
Note the timing rule: for anyone joining late or re-joining, “risk cover would start from the date of auto debit of premium from the subscriber's account.” So enrol and pay before an accident happens, not after.
How a claim is filed
The participating bank or Post Office is the “Master policy holder” for PMSBY, and the claim is processed through them in partnership with the insurance company. Here is the verified flow:
- Who files. For a death claim, the official FAQ says the claim “can be filed by the nominee/appointee as per the enrolment form or by the legal heir/s in case there is no nomination made by the subscriber bank account holder.” For a disability claim, the insured person files it themselves.
- Where to file. Approach the bank or Post Office branch that holds the PMSBY enrolment. They route it to the insurer.
- When to file. The official FAQ does not fix a specific number of days, but you should file as soon as possible after the accident. Do not sit on it.
- Where the money goes. “Disability claim will be credited in the bank account of the insured bank account holder / subscriber. Death claim will be remitted to the bank account of the nominee / legal heir(s).”
Documents the official scheme asks for
The PMSBY FAQ is narrower than the rumour mill suggests. What it actually states:
- For “road, rail and similar vehicular accidents, drowning, death involving any crime etc, the accident should be reported to police” (an FIR / police report).
- For “snake bite, fall from tree etc, the cause should be supported by immediate hospital record.”
- Death must be “confirmed by documentary evidence.” Suicide is not covered; murder is covered.
Your bank or insurer may ask for additional standard proof (such as a death certificate or a doctor's disability certificate) when settling the claim, so keep all medical and official records safe. We have listed only what the official FAQ itself spells out; do not assume a document is required just because a website claims it is.
A worked illustration (hypothetical)
Suppose a delivery rider holds an e-Shram card and assumes it covers him. He never enrolled in PMSBY. After a road accident causing serious disability, his family approaches the bank expecting Rs 2 lakh, and learns there is no policy to claim against, because the card alone never activated cover. Contrast a second worker who spent Rs 20 a year on PMSBY auto-debit and named his wife as nominee: his family files through the bank, submits the police report, and the claim is paid into the nominee's account. The Rs 20 step is the entire difference.
Common mistakes
- Believing the e-Shram card auto-insures you. It does not, today.
- Letting the bank balance run dry so the Rs 20 auto-debit fails and cover silently lapses.
- Not naming a nominee, which slows a death claim and pushes it onto legal heirs.
- Enrolling in two banks expecting two payouts. “The insured/ nominee shall be eligible for one claim only.”
- Waiting to enrol after an accident. Cover only starts from the date the premium is debited.
Frequently asked questions
Does the e-Shram card automatically give me 2 lakh insurance?
No. The card lists PMSBY as a linked benefit, but it does not enrol you. The free auto-cover window for early registrants closed around March 2022. To have live cover now, you must enrol in PMSBY through your bank and pay the Rs 20 premium.
How much does PMSBY cost and what does it pay?
The premium is Rs 20 per year per member, auto-debited from your account. It pays Rs 2 lakh for accidental death or full disability and Rs 1 lakh for the defined partial disability (loss of one eye, or use of one hand or foot).
Who can file the claim if the worker dies?
The nominee or appointee named on the enrolment form files it, or the legal heirs if no nominee was named. The death claim is paid into the nominee's or legal heir's bank account through the bank that held the PMSBY enrolment.
Is an FIR always needed?
Not for every case. For vehicular accidents, drowning or any death involving a crime, the accident should be reported to police. For events like snake bite or a fall, an immediate hospital record is what the scheme asks for.
I registered on e-Shram years ago. Am I covered now?
Only if you separately enrolled in PMSBY and your Rs 20 premium is being auto-debited each year. An old e-Shram registration by itself does not keep any accident cover alive.
Next steps
Walk into your bank or Post Office this week, ask for PMSBY, and set up the Rs 20 auto-debit with a named nominee. That one action is what turns the promise printed beside your e-Shram card into a claim your family can actually make. For more citizen guides and tools, see the Right to Information Wiki homepage, and read The RTI Playbook for how to push back when an authority stalls a claim or denies information.
Verify everything against the official sources before you act: the e-Shram social security schemes page and the Jan Suraksha (PMSBY) portal.
Disclaimer: This article is general information for citizens, not financial, insurance or legal advice. Scheme rules, premiums and benefits can change. Confirm the current terms with your bank, the insurer, and the official PMSBY and e-Shram portals before relying on them.
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