Most people buying health insurance look at the premium first. Then the coverage. Then maybe the hospital network. Very few look at the claim settlement ratio before signing up.
That is a mistake. Especially with group health insurance plans, where the stakes involve an entire workforce, and one bad experience with a rejected claim affects more than just one person.
What the Claim Settlement Ratio Actually Is
The claim settlement ratio is the percentage of claims an insurer settled in a financial year out of all the claims received.
If an insurer received 10,000 claims in a year and settled 9,600 of them, the ratio is 96%.
That number tells you one important thing. When people file a claim with this insurer, how often do they actually get paid.
It sounds simple. It is. But most buyers ignore it and then find out the hard way when a claim gets rejected.
Why It Matters More for Group Health Insurance Plans
Individual policies cover one person or one family. If something goes wrong, one family is affected.
Group health insurance plans cover an entire organisation. Employees, sometimes their dependents, too. When a claim gets rejected under a group plan, it is not just a financial problem for one person. It affects trust, morale, and the employer’s reputation with their own team.
An employer who picks a group plan purely on premium and ends up with an insurer that rejects a third of claims has a real problem. Staff who file claims and get rejected do not forget that.
So the claim settlement ratio is not just a performance number. For group plans it is a signal of whether the insurer will actually deliver when employees need it.
What a Good Ratio Looks Like
There is no universal cutoff, but here is a practical way to think about it.
Above 95% is considered strong. The insurer is settling the vast majority of claims without issue.
Between 90% and 95% is acceptable but worth investigating. Why is 5 to 10% of claims not being settled? Is it fraud detection, missing documents, or outright rejection on technical grounds?
Below 90% is a red flag. Nearly one in ten or more claims is not being paid. Before choosing any health insurance plans from such an insurer, you want a clear answer for why that number is where it is.
What the Ratio Does Not Tell You
This is just as important to understand.
A high claim settlement ratio does not mean claims are settled quickly. An insurer could settle 97% of claims but take 45 days to process each one. For someone hospitalised and waiting on cashless approval, speed matters as much as the final outcome.
It also does not tell you the average settled claim amount. An insurer might settle 96% of small claims but push back heavily on large ones. That would keep the ratio high while still leaving employees exposed to serious illnesses or expensive procedures.
And it does not reflect the experience of the claim process itself. How many follow-ups were needed? How much documentation was demanded? Were employees able to get cashless treatment without delays at the hospital counter?
The ratio is one data point. A useful one. But not the full picture on its own.
Other Things to Check Alongside the Ratio
When evaluating health insurance plans for a group, look at these along with the claim settlement ratio.
Incurred claims ratio. This is the percentage of premiums the insurer paid out as claims. A very low incurred claims ratio could mean the insurer is quietly rejecting many claims. A very high ratio might mean the insurer is financially stressed and may tighten claim approvals in future years.
Network hospitals. A high settlement ratio means little if the nearest network hospital is 40 kilometres away. Check the cashless hospital network against where your employees actually live and work.
Turnaround time on cashless approvals. Most group plans offer cashless hospitalisation. Approval for cashless treatment should be received within 2 to 4 hours for planned admissions. Delays at this stage cause real stress for employees.
Third-party administrator quality. Most group health insurance plans are serviced by a TPA. The TPA handles day-to-day claim processing. A good insurer with a poor TPA creates friction. Ask which TPA will be assigned and check their reputation separately.
Renewal history. Has the insurer been consistent in claim approvals over multiple years, or do ratios fluctuate? Consistency over 3 to 4 years is more reliable than one good year.
How to Use This When Comparing Group Plans
When you are comparing options for group health insurance plans, put the claim settlement ratio in context.
Take two insurers. One offers a premium that is 12% lower, with a claim settlement ratio of 88%. The other costs more but has a consistent ratio above 96%. The cheaper premium may look attractive on a spreadsheet, but it does not account for the costs of rejected claims, employee dissatisfaction, and the administrative effort involved in disputes.
For smaller companies where each employee relationship matters more, this trade-off is even sharper.
Get the claim settlement ratio data for the last 3 years, not just the most recent year. A single good year can be an outlier. Three years of consistent performance is a much better indicator.
The Ratio Is Public Information
IRDAI publishes claim settlement data for all registered insurers every year. It is freely available. There is no reason to rely only on what an insurer or broker tells you.
Before renewing or buying group health insurance plans, look it up yourself. It takes five minutes. And it is one of the clearest signals you have about how an insurer actually behaves when someone walks into a hospital and money is on the line.
