While medical expenses in India are through the roof, particularly in cities and for long-term conditions such as cancer or heart disease, even Rs 10-20 lakh health insurance can prove insufficient. A Rs 1 crore health cover, which was then seen as superfluous, is fast becoming a sensible step in the face of medical crises that may deplete savings or drive families into debt. But the question still is: How do you pay for so huge a cover without a high premium?
Why Rs 1 crore is the new benchmark
In metropolitan cities such as Mumbai, Delhi or Bengaluru, the bills for a week's stay in the ICU or major procedures can easily exceed Rs 20–30 lakh. Long-term treatments such as chemotherapy, organ transplant, or follow-up care can again jack up the bill. Factor in another 10–15% health inflation every year, and a Rs 1 crore cover amount begins to seem reasonable and not exorbitant.
It is especially most appropriate for middle- and upper-middle-income families who have aging parents, or for those aged 30s to 40s who want to protect themselves from future medical price inflation when premiums are still affordable.
How to affordably get Rs 1 crore cover
Though it might seem costly to pay Rs 1 crore upfront for a cover, insurers now provide policies that minimize the cost with high-deductible base policies and top-up covers.
1. Begin with a first-time plan of Rs 5-10 lakh:
Purchase a complete health insurance policy with an acceptable base cover that includes day-care procedures, room rent capping, and pre-and post-hospitalization expenses. A base policy of ₹5–10 lakh will typically include these and settle small or middle-sized claims.
2. Add a super top-up cover of Rs 90 lakh or more:
Super top-up plans kick in after your basic policy limit is exhausted in a policy term. Suppose you have a Rs 10 lakh basic policy and a Rs 90 lakh super top-up with a deductible of Rs 10 lakh. You're insured up to Rs 1 crore in a year. Top-up premium is much lower than a Rs 1 crore standalone policy.
3. Buy early and lock in low premiums:
Premiums are cheapest when you are young and healthy. Purchasing a long-term policy when you are in your 20s or 30s not only makes the annual expenditure cheaper but can enable you to get health benefits that have waiting periods, including maternity or pre-existing illness cover.
What to look for in comprehensive health covers
When buying high-sum insured policies, ensure the policy covers:
• No cap on the room or ICU charges
• Coverage for complex procedures like robotic surgery or organ transplantation
• High-quality private hospital chain of cashless hospitals
• Adequate restoration benefits if the sum insured gets used up
• Automatic sum increase or inflation protection in the years
Also, check whether the super top-up policy is being renewed every year and for several claims.
A growing trend with financial implications
Some insurers are now offering Rs 50 lakh to Rs 1 crore health covers, which are being retailed as "health shields" for critical diseases. Most customers are purchasing them in addition to company-sponsored group covers or to supplement low-coverage family floater schemes.
With a top-up premium on a Rs 1 crore base + top-up plan typically less than Rs 25,000–30,000 per annum for a young couple, this strategy provides peace of mind without draining your pocket.
In today's world, a Rs 1 crore cover is not extravagance—it's planning for the real cost of quality medical treatment. Planning ahead and buying early, you can very comfortably buy coverage for life.
Discover the latest Business News, Sensex, and Nifty updates. Obtain Personal Finance insights, tax queries, and expert opinions on Moneycontrol or download the Moneycontrol App to stay updated!
Find the best of Al News in one place, specially curated for you every weekend.
Stay on top of the latest tech trends and biggest startup news.