Insurance

Health Insurance in India: How Much Cover Does Your Family Actually Need?

June 3, 2025·7 min read

₹3L family floater isn't enough for most cities anymore. Here's how to calculate the right amount — and which type of plan to buy.

The Health Insurance Adequacy Crisis

The most common health insurance cover bought by Indian families: ₹3–5 lakh family floater.

The average cost of a serious illness hospitalization in a metro city private hospital in 2024: ₹4–8 lakh.

The math is uncomfortable. Most Indian families are underinsured by 2–3× the amount needed.

Why ₹3L Is No Longer Enough

Healthcare inflation in India runs at 12–15% per year — the highest of any major expense category.

2024 benchmark costs (metro city, private hospital):

  • Angioplasty: ₹3–6L
  • Bypass surgery: ₹6–12L
  • Cancer treatment (per year): ₹8–25L+
  • ICU admission (per week): ₹1.5–3L
  • Hip/knee replacement: ₹3–5L
  • Dialysis (per year): ₹4–6L

A ₹3L family floater won't cover a single bypass surgery for your father. It won't cover a cancer treatment for your spouse.

Calculating the Right Cover

The GullakX Health Insurance Formula:

For a family of 4 in a metro city:

  • Minimum: ₹10–15L family floater
  • Recommended: ₹15–25L family floater
  • Senior parents: Separate ₹10L+ policy each

For a family of 4 in a Tier-2 city:

  • Minimum: ₹7–10L
  • Recommended: ₹10–15L

For senior parents (60+):

  • Minimum: ₹5L individual policy
  • Recommended: ₹10L+ individual policy
  • Note: Premiums for 60+ are very high. The earlier you buy, the cheaper.

Types of Health Insurance

1. Individual Policy

  • Cover for each person separately
  • No risk of one member exhausting the shared pool
  • Higher premium than floater for same total cover

2. Family Floater

  • Shared pool among all family members
  • One member can use the full cover
  • Risk: If two members are hospitalized simultaneously, one might not have enough cover
  • Usually the right choice for families with young children and healthy adults

3. Super Top-Up Policy

  • Kicks in after your base cover is exhausted
  • Very cheap premium for high cover
  • Best strategy: ₹5L base plan + ₹20L super top-up = ₹25L effective cover at low cost

4. Critical Illness Policy

  • Lump sum payout on diagnosis of specified conditions (cancer, heart attack, stroke, etc.)
  • Supplements health cover — not a replacement
  • Good for families with history of critical illness

Which Insurer to Choose

Key metrics to compare:

  • Claim Settlement Ratio: Look for 95%+
  • Network hospitals: Must include hospitals near you
  • Cashless vs. reimbursement: Cashless is strongly preferred
  • Waiting period: 2–4 years for pre-existing conditions is standard
  • Room rent limits: Avoid policies with room rent sub-limits (they proportionally reduce all expenses)

Recommended for most families:

  • Star Health Family Health Optima
  • HDFC Ergo Optima Restore
  • Niva Bupa Health Companion
  • Care Supreme

The Super Top-Up Strategy

The most cost-effective approach for most families:

1. Buy a base plan: ₹5L family floater (lower premium)

2. Add a super top-up: ₹20L with ₹5L deductible (very low premium since it only kicks in after ₹5L is exhausted)

Total effective cover: ₹25L

Total cost: Often 30–40% less than a straight ₹25L plan

The deductible is covered by your base plan. You effectively have ₹25L of cover at the price of ₹5L.

Port Before You Have a Claim

If you're unhappy with your current insurer, port before you make a claim — not after. Porting lets you transfer your policy history (including pre-existing condition waiting periods) to a new insurer without losing accrued benefits.

The portability window: 45 days before your renewal date.

See where your family stands

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