Personal Finance

Insurance & Independence: Why Health Cover Is The First Step In Financial Security

Apart from being a defensive financial product, health insurance also enables long-term financial progress. Without adequate coverage, people may avoid career risks, postpone entrepreneurship, or maintain larger cash reserves instead of investing.

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When catastrophic medical risks are covered, families are less likely to interrupt investments, liquidate assets prematurely, or derail long-term financial goals. Photo: AI Image
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Summary

Summary of this article

  • Families without adequate health coverage often rely on loans or have to liquidate long-term investments, which can disrupt years of financial progress.

  • The situation is compounded by medical inflation.

  • Buying health insurance early typically in the mid-20s offers several advantages: lower premiums, fewer exclusions, and coverage established before lifestyle diseases emerge.

For many middle-class families, years of disciplined saving can disappear within weeks when a major health event strikes. Even households that follow budgeting, investing and long-term financial planning often discover that one weak link like inadequate health insurance can unravel everything.

Rohan learned this the hard way. At 28, he was financially disciplined. A Rs 12-lakh annual salary, Rs 3.5 lakh in savings, and SIPs of Rs 18,000 every month. He followed personal finance blogs, tracked expenses carefully, and had a clear goal of financial independence by 45. Then his father suffered a massive heart attack.

The emergency angioplasty, ICU stay and treatment at a private hospital cost Rs 8.2 lakh. His father had health insurance but it was a Rs 3 lakh policy purchased a decade earlier, with room-rent limits that reduced the effective payout to less than Rs 2 lakh.

Within weeks, Rohan’s savings were wiped out. His SIPs stopped. He took a Rs 4.5 lakh personal loan at 16 per cent interest to cover the remaining hospital bill.

His financial plan, carefully built over years, collapsed in two weeks.

According to health expenditure data, nearly 40 per cent of healthcare spending in India still comes directly from household pockets. This means medical emergencies often trigger a chain reaction - savings depletion, loan burdens, or forced asset sales.

“A lot of people see health insurance as something they will eventually get around to,” says Venkatesh Naidu, CEO at BajajCapital Insurance Broking Ltd. “But financially, it should come much earlier in the journey. Without that protection layer, every other financial goal remains vulnerable.”

When Medical Costs Disrupt Financial Plans

For many middle-class households, medical expenses are not just large, they arrive suddenly. A single cardiac event, cancer treatment, or accident can cost anywhere between Rs 5 lakh and Rs 20 lakh in urban hospitals today. Families without adequate health coverage often rely on loans or have to liquidate long-term investments, which can disrupt years of financial progress.

The situation is compounded by medical inflation. Healthcare costs in India are rising at around 14 per cent annually, significantly faster than general inflation. In practical terms, this means treatment costs can double every five years.

“You cannot realistically out-save healthcare inflation,” Naidu explains. “Insurance exists to transfer that catastrophic risk. Once that risk is covered, people can focus on wealth creation with far greater confidence.”

The Challenge Of Inadequate Cover

Even when families have insurance, the protection is often insufficient. Policies with Rs 3–5 lakh coverage may have been adequate a decade ago, but they no longer match today’s hospital costs. Room-rent caps, sub-limits, and exclusions can further reduce actual payouts during claims.

Financial planners now suggest to opt for significantly higher protection levels, particularly in urban India.

Typical benchmarks today include:

  • Rs 10–15 lakh individual coverage for working adults

  • Rs 15–20 lakh cover for parents above 60

  • Additional critical illness cover between Rs 25–50 lakh

  • Policies without room-rent restrictions

Comprehensive health protection for all family members can usually cost Rs 45,000–Rs 70,000 annually. While that figure may seem substantial, it is often far smaller than the financial impact of even one hospitalization.

Insurance As A Financial Enabler

Health insurance is often framed as a defensive financial product. In reality, it also enables long-term financial progress. Without adequate coverage, people may avoid career risks, postpone entrepreneurship, or maintain larger cash reserves instead of investing.

“Good financial planning isn’t only about growing money,” Naidu says. “It’s about protecting the ability to keep growing that money consistently over decades.”

When catastrophic medical risks are covered, families are less likely to interrupt investments, liquidate assets prematurely, or derail long-term financial goals.

The Advantage Of Starting Early

Timing also plays an important role. Buying health insurance early typically in the mid-20s offers several advantages: lower premiums, fewer exclusions, and coverage established before lifestyle diseases emerge. Waiting until later can make policies more expensive and may introduce waiting periods for conditions such as diabetes or hypertension.

Equally important is independent coverage. Employer-provided health insurance can disappear during job changes or career transitions, making personal policies an important layer of continuity.

Financial independence is often discussed in terms of investing, saving, and asset building. But before any of those strategies can succeed over the long term, families must first protect themselves from the risks that can undo years of progress. Naidu says, “Wealth creation and risk protection are two sides of the same coin. If the protection layer is missing, the wealth layer rarely survives long enough to matter.”

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