Personal Finance

When Insurance Gets Lost In Paperwork, A New Registry Steps In

The registry is expected to be part of a broader digital framework that includes Bima Sugam, a platform being developed to simplify how insurance is bought and serviced

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When Insurance Gets Lost In Paperwork Photo: AI
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Summary of this article

  • Irdai proposes Public Insurance Registry (PIR) for all policies in one place

  • Aims to solve lost, scattered, hard-to-track insurance records

  • Single view of life, health, motor policies, nominees, premiums

  • May improve claims processing, reduce fraud, enhance transparency

Insurance rarely feels complicated at the time of purchase. A policy is bought, a receipt is saved, perhaps a file is created. Then life moves on. Years later, what remains is not always the policy itself, but the uncertainty around it, where the document is, which insurer holds it, whether it is still active.

This is not unusual. Many households hold more than one policy, often across insurers and across time. A life cover bought early on, a health plan added later, vehicle insurance renewed annually. These decisions are rarely tracked in a single place. Instead, they sit across emails, paper files, and, sometimes, memory.

The Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (Irdai) is now looking to address this with a Public Insurance Registry (PIR), a centralised system intended to create a single record of all policies held by an individual, according to a recent report by The Economic Times.

2 March 2026

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A Familiar Problem, Often Discovered Late

The absence of a consolidated record does not usually cause concern on a day-to-day basis. The difficulty shows up when information is needed quickly.

A hospitalisation, for instance, can set off a search for policy details. Families may know that a cover exists but not have the documents at hand. In other cases, older policies are simply forgotten. This is particularly true for covers bought offline or through agents who are no longer in touch.

Even for policyholders, it isn’t always easy to stay on top of things over the years. Email IDs change or are abandoned, phone numbers are replaced, and documents end up buried in files or simply go missing. What remains is a fragmented trail.

There have been attempts to digitise records through insurance repositories, but these rely on individuals opting in. As a result, the system is far from complete.

A Move Towards A Single Record

The proposed Public Insurance Registry is meant to bring all policy-related information into one place. Right now, every insurer keeps its own set of records. The proposal is to bring all of that together into one place that shows the complete picture.

For policyholders, it would mean not having to log in to different websites or hunt through papers. All policies, life, health, motor, and others, could be seen together in one place. Details such as coverage, premium payments, and nominee information would be available together.

The registry is expected to be part of a broader digital framework that includes Bima Sugam, a platform being developed to simplify how insurance is bought and serviced. The larger intent is to reduce fragmentation and make the system easier to navigate.

What This Could Change

A central record addresses one of the most common issues in insurance: policies that exist but are difficult to trace.

If information is stored in a unified system, the chances of losing track of a policy reduce significantly. This matters most when families have to step in and look for these details themselves, especially if the policyholder is not around to guide them.

There may also be an impact on how claims are processed. When data is readily available and verified, the process could become less dependent on physical documents. It could cut down the back-and-forth that usually happens when papers are missing or details don’t match.

There’s another angle to it as well. When all the data sits together, it becomes easier to spot things that don’t quite add up, like the same claim showing up twice or details that don’t match across policies.

A System Still Taking Shape

The Public Insurance Registry isn’t up and running yet. It’s still being discussed, and what it finally looks like will depend on how insurers, agents, and the regulator come on the same page.

How well it works will come down to a few basics: how securely the data is handled, how smoothly different systems talk to each other, and whether people actually find it easy to use.

What is clear, however, is the direction of change. As other areas of finance move towards shared digital systems, insurance is beginning to follow.

For policyholders, the benefit may not lie in new features or products, but in something more basic, the ability to know, with certainty, what they own and where to find it.