Personal Finance

What Does A Five-Year Moratorium Period In Health Insurance Actually Mean For The Policyholders

The moratorium clause was put in place to give the long-term policyholders assurance and protection from any future refusals based on disclosures made earlier

AI
Five-Year Moratorium Period In Health Insurance Photo: AI
info_icon
Summary

Summary of this article

  • Health insurance moratorium protects against past disclosure-related claim rejection

  • A five-year moratorium does not guarantee every future health insurance claim

  • Fraud, exclusions, co-payments, and room rent limits can still apply

  • Continuous policy renewal and honest disclosure remain crucial for claim protection

The moratorium rule in health insurance is not as simple as many buyers think. Many policyholders believe that once they have completed five consecutive years with an insurer, no claim can be questioned thereafter. This is not correct.

The five-year rule provides policyholders with protection against rejection on certain grounds related to past disclosures. However, this does not make every claim payable by default. The insurer can still question a claim in cases involving fraud, permanent exclusions, policy breaks, co-payment clauses, room rent limits, non-payable items, or treatment that is outside the policy cover.

Let us find out what the moratorium period means, what it does not cover, and why policyholders must read the terms and conditions rather than blindly assuming that a five-year continuous coverage could make all future claims safe.

Five-Years In A Health Insurance Policy And All Future Claims 

According to experts, the passage of five consecutive years under a health insurance scheme does not guarantee that any claims in the future will become payable. There is considerable relief for the policyholder in the moratorium clause; nevertheless, it cannot nullify the terms and conditions of the insurance contract.

“Once the moratorium period expires, the insurers do not have any grounds to turn down the claim due to non-disclosure or representation of a pre-existing illness or any other medical condition that existed prior to taking out the health insurance policy, unless there is any fraud. Nevertheless, any such claim shall comply with the conditions and coverage of the policy as were then in force at the time of hospitalisation or treatment. Thus, the moratorium does not make a health insurance policy into a free-for-all reimbursement agreement,” says Narendra Bharindwal, president, Insurance Brokers Association of India (IBAI).

How Five-Year Moratorium Period Actually Protects Policyholders

The moratorium clause was put in place to give the long-term policyholders assurance and protection from any future refusals based on disclosures made earlier. As soon as the policy is kept continuous and uninterrupted for five years, then the insurer will no longer be able to make any inquiries regarding claims based on non-disclosures, representations, and omissions made about any illness and/or disease that existed before signing the contract, unless proven fraudulent.

This means that the moratorium clause puts an end to any issues that might arise from any disclosures made by the consumer at the time of buying the policy. It protects the consumers, especially those who have been living with illnesses since they bought the policy.

“At its core, the moratorium stops insurers from rejecting claims down the line just because of minor medical details or honest mistakes policyholders forgot to mention when they first bought the policy years ago. Unless the insurer can legally prove established fraud, it gives long-term policyholders the peace of mind that their claims are secure,” says Sarita Joshi, head of life & health insurance, Probus.

What Can Still Lead To A Health Insurance Claim Dispute

The moratorium period having been passed, claims may still be disputed in cases such as:

  • Fraudulent practices or intentional concealment of facts.

  • Treatments or medical conditions excluded by the policy.

  • Permanent exclusions agreed by the policyholder.

  • Costs that are not included under the insurance.

  • Co-payments, deductibles, sub-limits, and room rent restrictions.

  • Costs that are not covered under the insurance.

  • Cases where claims are made during the periods when the insurance cover was not renewed continuously.

  • Treatments that do not satisfy the criteria for medical necessities as stated by the policy.

  • Exceeding the sum insured or benefits available.

“Therefore, the moratorium cannot be taken as an assurance of payment. The best way to avoid being caught unawares is honest disclosure of health information at the inception of the policy, continuous renewal of the policy without breaks, understanding conditions within the policy, and seeking clarification regarding exclusions, sub-limits, and co-payment costs,” adds Bharindwal.

FAQs

1. Does completing five years in a health insurance policy guarantee all future claims will be paid?

No. The moratorium protects against claim rejection on certain past disclosure-related grounds, but claims must still satisfy policy terms, exclusions, and coverage conditions.

2. What protection does the five-year moratorium period provide?

After five continuous years, insurers generally cannot reject claims for non-disclosure or misrepresentation of pre-existing conditions unless fraud is established.

3. Can a claim still be rejected after the moratorium period ends?

Yes. Claims may still be disputed due to fraud, permanent exclusions, policy breaks, co-payments, room rent limits, non-payable items, or treatments not covered under the policy.

Published At:
CLOSE