India’s insurance penetration remains low at about 3.7% of GDP in 2023-24, significantly
below the global average of ~7% and mature markets like the US/UK with 10–12%
penetration. Life insurance accounts for roughly 2.8–3.0% of GDP, but only around 30% of
Indians have life cover, with a stark urban-rural divide—urban life-insured households are
~78% versus just 8–10% in rural areas. Younger generations (Gen Z and millennials) drive
most new policy sales (~85%), yet only about 34% of Indians own term life plans, mostly in
urban areas.
Key challenges include:
Heavy urban bias and low coverage among women, informal workers, and low-income
groups.
High out-of-pocket healthcare costs (~50% in India vs. ~20% globally) pushing millions into
poverty annually due to medical bills.
High out-of-pocket healthcare costs (~50% in India vs. ~20% globally) pushing millions into
poverty annually due to medical bills.
Behavioral barriers such as misconceptions about insurance cost and necessity, leading to
low purchase and high lapse rates (private insurers’ lapse ratio ~24%).
Government initiatives like PMJJBY, PMSBY, and Ayushman Bharat (PM-JAY) have
expanded coverage, especially for poor families, but benefits are often minimal. Some
states, like Rajasthan, have launched innovative schemes such as the Mukhyamantri
Ayushman Arogya Yojana offering comprehensive coverage up to ₹25 lakh per family and
accident insurance, with significant government premium subsidies covering 92% of
enrollees.
The insurance sector is poised for growth driven by digitization, regulatory support, and
rising awareness, yet the protection gap remains substantial. Individuals are encouraged to
assess their own insurance gaps—life cover ideally 10–15× annual income, adequate health
cover for major illnesses, and asset protection—to safeguard financial futures.
Check your personal insurance gap with NetWarth’s free Term Insurance Gap Calculator
here: https://lnkd.in/gUC6Rf7z
In summary, India’s insurance market is growing but still leaves much of the population
exposed due to low penetration, regional disparities, and behavioral hurdles. Closing this
gap requires continued government support, digital innovation, and greater financial literacy
to ensure broader, deeper insurance coverage across all segments of society. Your own
insurance check today could be a game-changer for your family’s financial security.