Personal Finance

Critical Illness Policies: Understanding Coverage, Limits, And Payouts

Once the diagnosis fits the policy terms and the basic conditions are met, the money is paid out

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Critical Illness Policies Photo: AI
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Summary

Summary of this article

  • Critical illness insurance covers specific diseases like cancer, heart attack, stroke

  • Payout depends on strict policy definitions, severity, and listed conditions

  • Benefit plans offer lump sum; indemnity plans cover hospitalisation expenses

  • Critical illness cover complements health insurance, not a replacement

A critical illness policy covers only certain serious conditions—things like cancer, heart attack, stroke, kidney failure, or major organ transplants. Exactly what’s included is mentioned in the policy document. Just being diagnosed isn’t always enough. The insurer looks at how the illness is defined in the policy and how serious it is before deciding on the payout.

Coverage Depends On Policy Definitions

“Take cancer, for instance—early-stage cases often don’t qualify. Most policies pay only when the disease has progressed further. The same applies to heart or neurological conditions, where not every diagnosis is covered. It has to meet the medical conditions laid down in the policy.

Given these differences, policyholders should carefully review the definitions, what's included, and what's excluded in their policy documents to fully understand what qualifies for a claim,” says Manish Dodeja, Chief Operating Officer, Care Health Insurance.

Thus, a critical illness could be a serious or life-threatening condition like cancer, kidney failure, a major heart attack, or stroke. “These conditions are valid to qualify for the critical illness criteria only if they are specifically listed and defined in the policy,” says Sarita Joshi, head of life & health insurance, Probus.

For early-stage conditions, the payout is typically a partial percentage of the sum insured, not the entire lump sum.

Two Types Of Critical Illness Cover

There are typically two types of critical illness products: indemnity and benefit. Indemnity provides coverage for hospitalization expenses, pre- and post-hospitalization expenses, etc., for critical illnesses like cancer. Only specified diseases as mentioned in the policy documents are covered, rather than routine/lifestyle ailment treatments and related hospitalisation.

Under the product, which belongs to the 'benefit' category, you get a one-time payout if you are diagnosed with an illness that the policy covers. This is what is mostly understood when we mention a critical illness policy. Whether the claim goes through depends on how the illness is defined in the fine print, and there may be conditions like a waiting period.

“What matters here is that the payout has nothing to do with your hospital bills. Once the diagnosis fits the policy terms and the basic conditions are met, the money is paid out. After that, how you use it is entirely up to you. It could go towards treatment, help you manage a temporary loss of income,  or simply ease other financial pressures,” says Dodeja.

A Regular Health Plan Is Important Even If You Have A Critical Illness Cover 

However, standalone critical illness cover is not sufficient on its own. It gives a one-time payout on diagnosis, but it does not cover actual medical expenses like those of a regular health plan. “Hence, it is better to have a balanced combination of both health insurance and critical illness cover, wherein one can be used for hospital bills and the other for additional financial support,” says Joshi.

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