Claim Document Uploaded but Missing: Break the Deficiency Loop

Reviewed on: 2026-06-12.

Indian document desk for claim document uploaded but missing complaint and escalation

Direct answer: do not upload the same file a fifth time. Build proof that you already submitted it, send every queried document once more in a single consolidated email to the insurer's claims ID and Grievance Redressal Officer, and state that under IRDAI's 2024 health claim norms the insurer must raise all document requirements in one go, not in instalments. If the portal status does not change in 14 days, escalate to Bima Bharosa with your proof trail attached.

The loop looks like this. Ashwin, in Nagpur, filed a reimbursement claim of Rs 92,300 after a dengue hospitalisation. The TPA portal asked for the discharge summary. He uploaded it. Two weeks later the status read “discharge summary awaited”. He uploaded it again, then a third time, each upload swallowed without a trace. Meanwhile his claim aged quietly and the settlement clock looked like it had never started. The portal is not malicious; it is a black box. Your job is to create a record outside the black box.

Build the proof-of-upload trail

Every future escalation rests on you proving that the document went in. Collect these now, before the next upload:

  • A full-screen screenshot at the moment of upload, with the portal's success message, the date and time visible, and the file name on screen.
  • The confirmation email or SMS the portal sends, if any. Search your inbox for the claim number; these confirmations often exist unnoticed.
  • The file's details: exact name, size in KB and format. Note them in one place. If you are comfortable with it, keep the original file untouched so its properties match your screenshots.
  • Ticket or reference numbers from every helpline call and chat. Ask the agent to read the number out and note the date.

Then make the single most effective move in this situation: email the same documents to the insurer's official claims email ID and the Grievance Redressal Officer. A portal upload can vanish into a queue. An email to the insurer is a delivery the insurer cannot deny receiving.

The one consolidated reply

IRDAI's 2024 master circular on health insurance expects insurers and TPAs to scrutinise a claim and call for whatever additional documents they need at one time. Piecemeal demands, one document per fortnight, are exactly what the regulator told insurers to stop. Use that. Send one email that closes every gap at once:

Subject: Claim [number], policy [number]. All queried documents
enclosed. Request to raise any remaining requirement in one
consolidated communication.

Dear Claims Team / Grievance Redressal Officer,

1. My claim [number] was filed on [date] for Rs [amount].
2. The portal shows "[document] awaited" although I uploaded
   it on [date], [date] and [date]. Screenshots of the upload
   confirmations are attached.
3. To close all gaps, I enclose with this email: discharge
   summary, final hospital bill with break-up, payment
   receipts, investigation reports, prescriptions, claim form
   and cancelled cheque.
4. Under the IRDAI master circular on health insurance, 2024,
   any further requirement must be raised in one consolidated
   communication, not piecemeal. Please confirm within 7 days
   that the claim is complete, or send me a single list of
   anything still needed.
5. Please also confirm the date from which the settlement
   timeline is being counted for this claim.

[Name, claim number, mobile, date]

Point 5 matters. Insurers sometimes treat each “deficiency” as resetting the clock. Putting the question in writing makes the games visible later.

If the loop continues

Step Action
1 No fix in 14 days: file on Bima Bharosa. Describe the problem as repeated deficiency demands for a document already submitted, and attach the screenshots and your consolidated email
2 Insurer rejects the claim for “non-submission”, or one month passes with no reply to your representation: go to the Insurance Ombudsman within one year. Your proof trail turns “non-submission” into the insurer's failure, not yours
3 Large claim or compensation sought: consumer commission via e-Daakhil, with the same bundle

Remember that your complaint is always against the insurer, not the TPA. The TPA processes documents on the insurer's behalf; the legal responsibility for deciding and paying your claim stays with the insurer. Name the insurer in every forum.

Two mistakes that keep people stuck

  • Following up only by phone. Six calls leave less of a record than one email. Helplines log your call as “resolved” the moment they tell you to upload again.
  • Uploading without recording. An upload with no screenshot and no confirmation email is, for escalation purposes, an upload that never happened. Record first, upload second.

A note on RTI: if your insurer is one of the public sector companies (New India, National, Oriental, United India, or LIC for life claims), you can file RTI asking for the dates your uploads were received and the deficiency notings on your claim file. Private insurers and private TPAs are not public authorities, so for them the Bima Bharosa and ombudsman route is the whole game. See how to file RTI online for the public sector cases.

FAQ

What counts as acceptable proof that I uploaded a document?

A dated screenshot of the success screen, the portal's confirmation email or SMS, and a consistent record of the file name and size. Any one helps; together they are difficult to argue with.

Is the insurer allowed to ask for documents one at a time?

The 2024 health insurance master circular expects requirements to be raised in one consolidated communication. Repeated single-document demands are a valid grievance in themselves, and worth stating plainly on Bima Bharosa.

Should I also courier physical copies?

For a stuck claim, yes, once. Send the full set by speed post to the insurer's claims office with a covering letter, and keep the tracking slip. It adds a second undeniable delivery to your trail.

The portal rejects my file for size or format. What is the fix?

Compress the PDF or split it into parts named clearly (bill-part-1, bill-part-2), and say so in your consolidated email. Then attach the originals to the email itself, which has no such limits.

Does the settlement deadline restart every time a query is raised?

The timeline is meant to run from the claim being complete, which is why insurers raise serial queries. Ask in writing which date the insurer is counting from. Repeated resets built on a document you already gave are exactly what the ombudsman looks at.

Whom do I name in my complaint, the TPA or the insurer?

The insurer. The TPA acts for it. Bima Bharosa and the ombudsman both proceed against insurers, and the insurer cannot hide behind its TPA's portal.

Reader signal

Was this article useful?

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

- views