Mumbai: India’s health insurance sector is grappling with systemic leakages estimated at a staggering ₹10,000 crore annually. This alarming figure, driven primarily by fraud, waste, and abuse (FWA), is detailed in a new industry report titled “Rebuilding Trust: Combating Fraud, Waste, and Abuse in India’s Health Insurance Ecosystem.” The study paints a somber picture, warning that entrenched fraudulent behaviors—ranging from inflated medical bills to unnecessary procedures and billing irregularities—are becoming omnipresent across the entire healthcare value chain, impacting insurers, hospitals, and beneficiaries alike.
“Leakages are silently eroding trust and weakening the insurance ecosystem. Unless stakeholders collectively act, the impact on premiums, public spending, and coverage expansion will intensify,” the report highlights.
₹1.27 Lakh Crore Health Insurance Market at Risk
India’s health insurance industry has witnessed significant growth, reaching a whopping ₹1.27 lakh crore in FY2025, marking a robust CAGR of almost 17% over the last five years. The momentum isn’t expected to slow down anytime soon; forecasts suggest that the sector could soar to ₹2.6 to 3 lakh crore by 2030, driven by heightened awareness of health protection, digital advancements, and evolving regulatory mechanisms like composite licensing.
Despite this anticipated growth, the report reveals concerning structural issues:
| Claim Type | Share of Total Claims |
|---|---|
| Genuine / Risk-free claims | 90% |
| Fraudulent claims | 2% |
| Inefficient / Suspicious cases | 8% |
While outright fraud constitutes only 2% of claims, the 8% classified as “inefficient” presents the largest opportunity for savings. These inefficiencies inflate insurance payouts without necessarily compromising genuine care, indicating a need for reform.
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AI Seen as Game-changer for Prevention
The report underscores the potential of digital technologies, especially AI and Generative AI, to revolutionize fraud management by shifting from a manual, reactive approach to an automated, predictive framework. Instead of focusing merely on post-claim detection of fraudulent activities, AI-driven platforms offer real-time verification, anomaly detection, behavioral pattern monitoring, and data interoperability among insurers.
“Harnessing interoperable platforms and digital intelligence can expedite fraud targeting and restore confidence in the insurance ecosystem,” said Swayamjit Mishra, Managing Director & Partner at BCG.
The proposed three-pillar strategy incorporates:
- Prevention: smart policy frameworks, digital verification, standard operating protocols.
- Detection: AI-based monitoring, risk scoring, fraud pattern analytics.
- Deterrence: stronger penalties, regulatory compliance tracking, hospital empanelment reforms.
No Longer Limited to Major Medical Hubs
Contrary to popular belief, the report suggests that fraud and inflated claims are not confined to major medical hubs like Mumbai, Delhi, Hyderabad, or Bengaluru. Instead, fraudulent patterns are becoming increasingly dispersed, reflecting the rise in medical digitization, insurance penetration, and reliance on third-party agents and intermediaries.
Leakages Affecting Customers
The financial ramifications linked to FWA extend beyond administrative losses and directly impact customers through:
- Increased insurance premiums.
- Strain on government-funded health schemes.
- Reduced profit margins for insurers.
- Lengthy claim settlement timelines.
- Delayed processing for genuine policyholders.
“Digital trust needs to be hardwired into India’s insurance infrastructure to ensure that affordability and accessibility are protected,” remarked Satish Gidugu, CEO of Medi Assist.
A Shift Needed to Protect India’s ‘Insurance for All’ Vision
As the government pushes towards achieving universal health coverage, experts warn that failing to rein in fraud could hinder policy adoption and escalate long-term healthcare costs. The report asserts that through technology reform, governance discipline, and data standardization, India has the potential to expedite its “Insurance for All” initiative by as much as five years.


