How to File an Insurance Complaint in India: IRDAI Bima Bharosa, Ombudsman & What Actually Works

Your claim was rejected. Or it's been sitting in "under review" for six weeks with no update. Or the settlement amount is significantly lower than what you believe you're entitled to. Or the insurer keeps asking for the same documents you've already sent three times.
You've called the customer care number. You've written emails that generated acknowledgement tickets and nothing else. What do you do now?
India's insurance regulatory framework gives policyholders multiple escalation paths. Knowing which one to use — and in what order — makes the difference between a complaint that gets resolved and one that loops indefinitely.
Start Here: Internal Grievance Redressal (Before Going External)
Every IRDAI-regulated insurer is required to have a formal Grievance Redressal Officer (GRO) and a structured internal escalation process. Before approaching any external authority, you must give the insurer a chance to resolve the complaint through this channel.
This isn't just etiquette — it's a procedural requirement. External forums (the Ombudsman in particular) will typically ask whether you've exhausted internal remedies first.
How to escalate internally:
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File a written complaint to the insurer's GRO. Most insurers have a dedicated email address (usually grievance@[insurer].com or complaints@[insurer].com) and an online form. Submit in writing so you have a record.
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Get a complaint reference number. The insurer is required to acknowledge your complaint within 3 working days and resolve it within 15 days (IRDAI's mandated turnaround time for most grievances).
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Escalate to the CEO/nodal officer if the GRO response is unsatisfactory or doesn't come within the timeframe. Contact details for senior officers are usually listed in the policy document or on the insurer's website under "Grievance Redressal."
Keep copies of everything: your original complaint email, the acknowledgement, any response you receive, and the dates.
If Internal Escalation Fails: IRDAI Bima Bharosa Portal
Bima Bharosa is IRDAI's centralised policyholder grievance portal, launched as part of the Bima Sugam initiative. It replaces the older IGMS (Integrated Grievance Management System) and gives policyholders a single window to register, track, and escalate complaints against any IRDAI-regulated insurer.
Website: bimabharosa.irdai.gov.in
Who can use it: Any policyholder or claimant with a complaint against an insurer regulated by IRDAI.
What it covers: Claim rejections, delays in settlement, mis-selling, premium disputes, policy servicing issues, and more.
How to file:
- Visit the Bima Bharosa portal and register with your mobile number or email
- Select your insurer and complaint category
- Describe your grievance in detail — include your policy number, claim number, dates of communication, and what resolution you're seeking
- Upload supporting documents (policy, claim correspondence, rejection letter)
- Submit and note your complaint reference number
IRDAI monitors resolution timelines on this portal and can escalate to the insurer if they fail to respond within the prescribed timeframe.
Helpline: IRDAI's toll-free consumer helpline is 155255 (or 1800 4254 732). You can call to register complaints or get guidance.
The Insurance Ombudsman: Your Most Powerful Free Tool
If the insurer's internal process and IRDAI Bima Bharosa haven't resolved your complaint, the Insurance Ombudsman is the most effective escalation available to individual policyholders.
The Ombudsman system exists specifically to provide free, impartial dispute resolution for policyholders. The process is designed to be accessible — you don't need a lawyer, and there are no fees.
Jurisdiction: The Ombudsman handles complaints against:
- Life insurers
- General insurers
- Health insurers
- Third-party administrators (TPAs)
What complaints qualify:
- Partial or total claim rejection
- Dispute over claim amount
- Delay in claim settlement beyond the prescribed period
- Delay in issuing the policy after premium payment
- Premium dispute
- Policy terms misrepresentation
Monetary limit: The Ombudsman can adjudicate on personal line insurance complaints up to ₹50 lakh (claim value). For most individual policyholders, this covers nearly all disputes.
Which Ombudsman to approach: There are 17 Ombudsman offices across India. As a Noida policyholder, your relevant office is the Delhi Ombudsman, which covers Noida, Greater Noida, and the NCR.
Delhi Insurance Ombudsman
Office of the Insurance Ombudsman, Delhi
2/2 A, Universal Insurance Building, Asaf Ali Road, New Delhi – 110 002
Phone: 011-23237539 / 23232481
Email: bimalokpal.delhi@cioins.co.in
Time limit: You must file the complaint within one year of the insurer's final rejection or the last communication from them. Don't wait.
How to file:
- Write a formal complaint letter addressed to the Ombudsman
- Include: your name, address, policy number, insurer name, nature of the grievance, amount in dispute, relief sought
- Attach: all correspondence with the insurer, the policy document, the rejection letter or claim settlement details, proof of filing the internal complaint
- Submit by post, in person, or check if online submission is available at their office
The Ombudsman will hear both sides and typically pass an award within 90 days of receiving the complaint. The award is binding on the insurer (the policyholder can accept or reject it).
IRDAI's Bima Sugam and the Digital Shift
IRDAI's broader Bima Sugam platform — a unified digital marketplace for insurance — is progressively integrating complaint management. As it matures, the digital trail of all policy purchases, claims, and communications through the platform should make dispute resolution faster and more evidence-based.
For now, the Bima Bharosa portal is the most practical digital channel.
Consumer Forum: When the Ombudsman Doesn't Apply
The Consumer Protection Act, 2019 creates Consumer Disputes Redressal Commissions at the district, state, and national level. These forums can handle insurance disputes but are more formal, slower, and typically warrant legal assistance.
Use the Consumer Forum if:
- Your claim value exceeds the Ombudsman's ₹50 lakh limit
- The dispute involves a commercial (not personal) insurance policy
- You want to seek compensation beyond the insurance claim amount (for mental harassment, deficiency of service)
- The Ombudsman's award was unsatisfactory and you want to appeal further
District Consumer Forum handles disputes up to ₹50 lakh, State Commission up to ₹2 crore, and the National Commission above that.
What Actually Works: Practical Notes
Documentation is everything. Every communication with your insurer should be in writing. If you've had phone conversations, follow up with an email summarising what was discussed. An insurer cannot dispute what's in writing.
Be specific about the relief you're seeking. "I want my claim settled" is less effective than "I am requesting settlement of ₹2,34,000 per the hospitalisation bill dated 14 March 2025, rejected by your letter dated 2 April 2025, on the grounds that [specific reason]."
The Ombudsman is faster than most people expect. Most awards are passed within 30–90 days. It costs nothing and requires no legal representation. It is consistently the most effective channel for individual policyholders.
Social media escalation as a practical tool. While not a formal grievance channel, a detailed, factual public post tagging the insurer's official handle often accelerates internal resolution — because insurers monitor their reputation carefully. This works best as a complement to formal channels, not a substitute.
Don't accept a settlement that's significantly below what you're owed without understanding why. Insurers sometimes settle at a lower amount hoping policyholders won't escalate. If the reason for the reduction isn't clearly explained and justified by the policy terms, it's worth pushing back through formal channels.
Filing an insurance complaint is not confrontational — it's using a system that was specifically designed for you. IRDAI has invested significantly in making policyholder grievance redressal accessible. Use it.
If you're navigating a claim dispute and want guidance on which channel to use and how to present your complaint effectively, call Policywings at +91-98111-67809.
Policywings Insurance Broking Pvt. Ltd. | IRDAI License No. DB 835 | A-57, 5th Floor, Sector-136, Noida | +91-98111-67809












