If your health insurance policy has lapsed due to missed premium payments, you are not alone. Many policyholders miss renewal dates, but the good news is that revival is often possible. However, it comes with important risks—especially the loss of key benefits you may have built over time.

1. What Does “Policy Lapse” Mean?

A health insurance policy is considered lapsed when you fail to pay the premium even after the grace period (usually 15–30 days).

After this:

  • Coverage stops completely
  • You cannot claim insurance benefits
  • You lose continuity protection in many cases

2. What Is the Grace Period?

The grace period is a short extension after your due date where:

  • You can still pay the premium
  • Your policy is technically active

But there is a catch:

  • Claims may not be allowed during this period in some cases
  • If payment is not made, the policy lapses completely

3. Can a Lapsed Policy Be Revived?

Yes, most insurers allow revival within a specific timeframe (often 30–90 days or more depending on the insurer).

Revival may require:

  • Payment of pending premiums + interest
  • Health declaration
  • Medical tests (in some cases)
  • Insurer approval

👉 Important: Revival is not automatic and is treated like a reassessment of your policy.

4. The Biggest Risk: Loss of Key Benefits

This is where policyholders face major setbacks.

🔴 1. Waiting Period Reset

If your policy lapses:

  • Waiting periods for diseases, maternity, or surgeries may restart
  • You lose credit for time already completed

🔴 2. Loss of No Claim Bonus (NCB)

  • Rewards for claim-free years may be reduced or wiped out

🔴 3. Fresh Underwriting

Insurers may:

  • Ask for new medical tests
  • Increase premium
  • Add exclusions based on health condition

🔴 4. Reduced Continuity Benefits

Benefits like:

  • Pre-existing disease coverage credit
  • Long-term loyalty advantages

may no longer continue smoothly.

5. Why Revival Is Not Always Easy

Depending on how long the policy has been inactive:

  • Short delay → simple revival possible
  • Longer lapse → strict medical checks or rejection
  • Very long lapse → treated as a new policy

6. Should You Revive or Buy New Policy?

 Revival is better if:

  • Lapse is recent
  • Health condition is stable
  • Waiting period benefits are important

 Buying new policy may be better if:

  • Revival is costly or rejected
  • Health condition has improved significantly
  • Better modern plans are available

7. Final Takeaway

Yes, reviving a lapsed health insurance policy is possible, but it is not risk-free.

👉 The key warning is:
You may lose waiting period credits, no-claim bonuses, and other continuity benefits—essentially resetting your policy advantages.

 

Disclaimer:

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of any agency, organization, employer, or company. All information provided is for general informational purposes only. While every effort has been made to ensure accuracy, we make no representations or warranties of any kind, express or implied, about the completeness, reliability, or suitability of the information contained herein. Readers are advised to verify facts and seek professional advice where necessary. Any reliance placed on such information is strictly at the reader’s own risk.

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