The Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI) has introduced new rules in the two wheeler insurance regime. These updates aim to standardise coverage, tighten compliance, and better protect riders, but they also bring new questions. Whether you ride a scooty, motorbike, or electric scooter, it’s critical to understand how your wallet, documentation, and claim rights may shift under these new rules.
Why Two Wheeler Insurance Rules Are Getting an Update?
What IRDAI Says About the Changes?
IRDAI has rolled out several changes to the two wheeler insurance norms to strengthen regulatory norms. Some key directives include extending minimum third-party cover periods, revising compensation limits, enforcing stricter documentation norms, and standardising formats for digital policies.
The regulator aims to reduce fraud, avoid policy lapses, ensure better claims transparency, and ensure riders carry valid coverage for longer durations.
Also read: The Ultimate Guide to Your Motor Vehicles Act Rights
A Quick Look Back at How Bike Insurance Policies Used to Work
Traditionally, two wheeler insurance, especially third-party bike insurance policies, ran on one-year cycles. Riders renew annually or sometimes skip renewal, leading to large numbers of uninsured bikes on the roads. Comprehensive bike insurance or “own damage + third party” policies offered more perks but came with higher premiums and variable benefits. In 2020, IRDAI mandated five-year third-party coverage for new two-wheelers to reduce lapses.
What’s Actually Changing for Riders?
Premiums and Discounts – What’s New?
Revised Third-Party Compensation Limits: IRDAI is increasing third-party property damage limits (from older caps like ₹6,000 to as high as ₹1 lakh).
Longer Policy Duration Discounts: Buyers opting for longer-term policies (e.g. 5 years TP + multi-year own damage) may receive steeper discounts per year vs renewing each year.
Standard Premium Bands: Insurers will follow common premium slabs for similar vehicles, reducing discrepancies among offers.
Digital Policies and Documentation – How Things are Different?
Mandatory Digital Policy Issue: Every insurer must issue a digital version of the policy and share it electronically (e-mail or SMS) in standard format.
Uniform Document Rules: Riders must now carry digital or physical copies of two wheeler insurance, registration, driving license, and Pollution Under Control (PUC) certificates at all times. Failure to present these may lead to fines. For that, they can upload to government-approved applications like DigiLocker.
Policy Renewal Alerts: IRDAI now mandates that insurers send renewal reminders well before expiry to reduce policy lapses.
Claims Process – Easier or More Structured?
Faster Turnaround: Insurers are required to process legitimate claims within a prescribed time or provide reasons for delay.
Standard Claim Formats: Standardised forms and procedures across insurers make it easier for riders to follow the same process regardless of company.
Stricter Checks: More stringent documentation checks (photos, video, repair bills) may slow some claims, but reduce fraudulent payouts.
Coverage Updates – What’s Included and What’s Not?
Personal Accident Cover Remains Fixed: Insurer must pay 100% in case of death; for severe disability, 50% or 100% depending on the injury.
Enhanced IDV (Insured Declared Value): Depreciation policies are now tightly regulated; older bikes get more depreciation, affecting the claimable value.
New Exclusions Strictly Enforced: No claims if riding under the influence, without a license, or using the vehicle for unauthorised purposes.
How Do These Changes Affect Your Daily Ride?
On Your Wallet – Premiums, Costs, and Savings
Some riders may see slightly higher premiums, especially if their vehicle model or engine capacity falls under more risk bands. However, long-term policies with upfront payment may offer better value overall.
If you maintain a clean claims record, discounts and No Claim Bonus (NCB) will become even more meaningful under the new norms.
Staying Compliant – Deadlines and Documents You Can’t Ignore
You must renew your policy well before expiry and ensure documents like registration, PUC, and license are all current. Failure to carry or show them may lead to fines or refusal of claims.
Also, you can no longer delay renewal easily; grace periods may shrink or vanish under the stricter regime.
Making Claims – What Riders Can Expect Now
Expect more structured documentation demands: photos/videos of damage, repair invoices, and proof of ownership. If your claim is valid and the documentation is in order, the process should be more transparent and faster.
However, claims may be rejected more strictly than earlier if any document is missing or irregular.
Experts Weigh In on the New Rules
Several insurers, brokers, and consumer groups have expressed cautious optimism. They believe the stricter rules will discourage freeloading uninsured vehicles and reduce fraud. However, some warn that premium hikes may impact lower-income riders disproportionately.
Data and Examples – What the Numbers Say
While comprehensive data is emerging, recent reports show that tens of millions of two-wheelers in India remain uninsured or operate with lapsed policies, so the 5-year TP mandated in 2020, which aimed to curb this.
Riders’ Most Common Questions Answered
Do I Need to Update My Current Policy?
Not immediately. Existing valid policies will continue till their expiry under the old terms. When you renew, the new rules will take effect.
Will My Claims Be Affected?
If your documentation is complete and valid, your claim should remain unaffected. However, missing or outdated documents might lead to stricter scrutiny or rejection.
Are These Rules Applicable in Every State?
Yes, since IRDAI is the central insurance regulator, these rules apply nationwide (in all states). Local enforcement (like fines for not carrying policy) may differ by state.
Steps to Make Sure You’re Prepared
● Check Your Policy Online
Log in to your insurer’s website or app and verify policy expiry, coverage details, and whether you have a digital copy.
● Gather and Update Required Documents
Ensure your driving license, registration, PUC, and ID proofs are up to date. Take clear digital scans or photos.
● Keep Track of Deadlines
Set reminders 30 days ahead of renewal. Don’t wait till the last minute; missing renewal may lead to fines or loss of coverage.
Key Takeaways for Riders
New two wheeler insurance rules bring greater compliance, transparency, and stricter documentation. While some premiums may rise, longer-term policies may offer cost benefits. Bike insurance claims will become more structured, and documentation integrity will play a key role. Every rider must stay alert: update documents, renew on time, and adapt to new norms.
By proactively following these changes, you can ride confidently and avoid surprises when filing a claim promptly.
































