Vehicle Insurance Claim 2026
Reviewed on 2026-06-20 by Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak.
Quick answer. Intimate your insurer the same day, note the claim number, and let the surveyor inspect the vehicle. Under IRDAI rules the surveyor must be allocated within 24 hours and the insurer must decide within 7 days of the survey report. If it stalls, escalate on Bima Bharosa.
The claim that quietly drains your bank account
Your bumper is hanging, the workshop wants an advance, and the insurer's app keeps saying “claim under process.” Weeks pass. The garage starts charging parking. You begin to wonder whether you should just pay the bill yourself and forget the policy you have been renewing for years.
This is the trap thousands of vehicle owners fall into every year. A claim is not lost because the law is against you. It is lost because owners do not know the timeline the insurer is legally bound to, miss one document, or report the accident too late. This guide fixes that, separating the two completely different tracks that owners constantly confuse.
Two claims, never mix them up
There are two distinct claims hiding inside one policy.
- Own-damage (OD) claim. Your own car or bike is damaged. The insurer pays you, minus deductions. This is the everyday claim.
- Third-party (TP) claim. Your vehicle injured or killed another person, or someone else's vehicle hit you. This is decided by a tribunal, not the insurer.
Treating a third-party injury like an own-damage dent is the single biggest reason claims collapse. Read whichever track applies to you.
Track 1: Own-damage claim, the everyday process
This is the claim you file when your insured vehicle is dented, flooded, stolen, or burnt.
Step 1: Intimate the same day
Call the insurer's claims helpline or use its app and raise the claim before you move the vehicle for major repairs. Note down the claim number, the date, and the name of the person you spoke to. Late intimation is the excuse insurers use most often to cut a claim, so do it on day one.
Step 2: Let the surveyor inspect
For most motor losses a registered surveyor inspects the damage. Under the IRDAI Master Circular on Protection of Policyholders' Interests 2024, the surveyor must be allocated within 24 hours of you reporting the claim, and must submit the survey report within 15 days. For a small loss below Rs 50,000, no surveyor is mandatory and the insurer may assess it through an app with photos you upload, which is far quicker.
Step 3: Choose cashless or reimbursement
At a network garage the insurer settles the bill directly (cashless), and you pay only your deductible plus any non-covered parts. At any other garage you pay first and claim reimbursement with the bills. Cashless is less painful on your wallet, so check the insurer's network list before towing the vehicle anywhere.
Step 4: The 7-day settlement clock
Once the insurer receives the survey report, it must decide the claim within 7 days. A delay beyond this is a breach of the IRDAI framework, and you are entitled to interest on the amount. Crucially, the insurer cannot reject your claim only because of a document it never asked for at the time it sold you the policy.
You may see deductions for depreciation on parts, your compulsory deductible, and salvage value. These must be shown to you with a documented explanation, not slipped in silently. If you do not claim in a policy year, you keep your No Claim Bonus, which lowers next year's premium, so for a tiny dent it is often cheaper to pay out of pocket. Verify the exact bonus slab on your policy schedule.
Track 2: Third-party claim, the tribunal route
When your vehicle hurts someone, or you are the victim of another vehicle, the compensation is decided by the Motor Accident Claims Tribunal (MACT), not by an insurance company.
Step 1: FIR and the eDAR report
Report the accident to the police station that covers the accident spot and get the FIR. The police now log accident records digitally through eDAR (electronic Detailed Accident Report) on the parivahan iRAD system, which feeds the tribunal and the insurer. The FIR is a mandatory document for an injury or death claim.
Step 2: File at MACT within six months
This is the deadline that silently destroys claims. Section 166(3) of the Motor Vehicles Act 1988, in force since 1 April 2022, says no application for compensation shall be entertained unless it is made within six months of the accident. Older guides still say there is “no time limit.” That is outdated. File the claim petition at the tribunal with jurisdiction over the accident, your residence, or the insurer's office, well inside six months.
Step 3: The tribunal decides
The tribunal hears the victim, the vehicle owner, and the insurer, and fixes compensation. Awards usually carry interest from the date of filing until payment, so delay by the other side does not erode your money.
Figure: step-by-step flow. If a step stalls, use the grievance or RTI route shown.
When the claim is rejected, delayed or short-paid
If the insurer drags past its timelines, deducts unfairly, or rejects without a sound reason, you have a clear ladder. Do not give up and pay the workshop yourself.
- Insurer grievance cell first. Send a written complaint and keep the acknowledgement. Wait up to 15 days for a reply.
- IRDAI Bima Bharosa. Register the grievance at https://bimabharosa.irdai.gov.in or call the toll-free 155255. IRDAI forwards it to the insurer and monitors the response.
- Insurance Ombudsman. For an unresolved personal dispute, approach the Ombudsman free of cost.
- RTI, where it applies. If your insurer is a public-sector general insurer (New India, Oriental, National or United India), you can file an RTI to ask for your file notings and the surveyor report. RTI also works for the police and eDAR accident records, which strengthen a tribunal claim. A private insurer is not covered by RTI, so route that grievance through Bima Bharosa and the Ombudsman instead.
Before you do any of this, clear any pending traffic dues, because an open challan can complicate vehicle paperwork. You can check and pay your eChallan online in minutes.
Keep your vehicle papers claim-ready
A clean paper trail settles claims faster. Make sure your registration matches the current owner, especially after a sale, by completing the RC ownership transfer. If your registration certificate or licence is lost, sort the duplicate RC and DL before you file. Drivers who travel abroad should also keep their international driving permit current, and frequent highway users should keep their FASTag KYC clean to avoid toll disputes that cloud a claim.
Frequently asked questions
How many days does an insurer get to settle my claim?
Under the IRDAI Master Circular 2024, the surveyor is allocated within 24 hours and submits the report within 15 days, and the insurer must then decide the claim within 7 days. A delay beyond this entitles you to interest on the amount.
Is a surveyor compulsory for every motor claim?
No. For a motor loss below Rs 50,000 a registered surveyor is not mandatory, and the insurer can assess it through an app using the photos you upload. Larger losses are surveyed by a registered surveyor and loss assessor.
Can the insurer reject my claim for a missing document?
It cannot reject solely because of a document it never asked for when it issued the policy. Every deduction and rejection must come with a documented, reasonable explanation, not a one-line refusal.
Who decides a third-party accident claim?
The Motor Accident Claims Tribunal, not the insurer. You file a claim petition there with the FIR and accident records, and the tribunal fixes the compensation that the insurer then pays.
What is the deadline to file a third-party claim?
Section 166(3) of the Motor Vehicles Act 1988, effective from 1 April 2022, requires the application within six months of the accident. Do not rely on older articles that say there is no time limit.
Will I lose my No Claim Bonus if I claim?
A No Claim Bonus is earned for each year you do not make an own-damage claim and is lost when you do. For a minor dent it is often cheaper to pay yourself and protect the bonus. Confirm your slab on the policy schedule.
What if the insurer ignores my complaint?
Complain to the insurer first and wait 15 days. If unresolved, register on IRDAI Bima Bharosa or call 155255, then approach the Insurance Ombudsman. Public-sector insurers can also be questioned through an RTI.
Can I use RTI against my insurer?
Only if it is a public-sector general insurer such as New India, Oriental, National or United India. RTI does not apply to private insurers, but it does work for police and eDAR accident records useful in a tribunal claim.
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