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Life Insurance Claim Settlement in Nepal

A life insurance policy is only as good as the claim it pays. This guide explains how life insurance claim settlement works in Nepal: what the law entitles you to, how the country’s insurers actually perform, and the practical steps that make sure your family’s claim is paid quickly when it matters. Where you need the detail, we point you to the specific page for it.

What “claim settlement” actually means

A claim is the moment the policy does its job. In life insurance there are two main kinds: a death claim, paid to your nominee if you die during the policy term, and a maturity claim, paid to you if you survive to the end of the term. “Claim settlement” is simply whether – and how quickly – the insurer pays what it promised when a valid claim is made. For most families it is the only part of the policy that will ever truly matter, which is why it deserves more attention than the bonus rate on the brochure.

Your rights as a claimant in Nepal

Nepali law is clearer, and more in your favour, than most people realise. Under the Insurance Regulation 2081:

  • A claim must be settled within 7 days of the insurer receiving the required documents – for both death and maturity claims. (The widely repeated “30 days” figure is a misreading: the 30-day rule is about insurers reporting unsettled claims to the regulator each quarter, not the deadline to pay you.)
  • A declined claim must come with written reasons within 7 days. An insurer cannot simply go silent – if it decides not to pay, it must tell you, in writing, why.
  • You can escalate to the regulator. If you believe a claim has been wrongly delayed or denied, you can file a complaint with the Nepal Insurance Authority (NIA), which oversees claim conduct under the Insurance Act 2079.

Knowing these timelines is itself protection: if an insurer drags its feet without a written reason, it is not following the rules, and you have grounds to push back.

How Nepal’s 14 insurers actually perform

Rules set the floor; track record tells you who clears it comfortably. One honest caveat first: the NIA does not publish a per-company “claim settlement ratio.” It publishes the amount of claims paid and the amount still outstanding, and the ratio is something we derive from those two figures. It is amount-based, it is a year-end snapshot, and it excludes rejected claims – so a low number is a reason to ask questions, not proof that a company denies claims.

On that measure, for FY 2081/82 the field ranges from roughly 99% at the top (Asian Life leads at 98.85%, with Sun Nepal and Prabhu Mahalaxmi close behind) down to around 80%, with several large insurers sitting mid-table because their fast-growing claim pipelines inflate the year-end outstanding balance. We rank all 14, show the year-on-year trend, and explain each company’s position fairly on our dedicated page:

-> See the full ranking: Claim Settlement Ratios of all 14 Nepali life insurers

How to make sure your family’s claim gets paid

Most claim problems in Nepal are not caused by an unwilling insurer – they are caused at the application and documentation stage, which means they are largely in your control:

  • Disclose your health honestly when you buy. Leaving out a pre-existing condition, even a small one, is the most common reason a claim is later contested.
  • Keep your nominee details current. Mismatches between the nominee on the policy and the legal heir are a leading cause of delay.
  • Submit complete documents together. The 7-day clock starts only once the insurer has everything it needs – a missing paper resets the wait.

-> Step-by-step: How to claim life insurance in Nepal – the documents, the process, and who to contact.

Choosing an insurer you can rely on

Claim record is one pillar of a good decision; financial strength, the right plan, and a fair price are the others. We rank every insurer on the full picture and review each one individually, so you can see where claim reliability fits alongside everything else.

Sources: claim-settlement and written-reason timelines from the Insurance Regulation 2081 (बीमा नियमावली, २०८१); regulatory oversight under the Insurance Act 2079; performance figures derived from the NIA Annual Report FY 2081/82 (Schedules 14 and 15). The claim settlement ratio is our own amount-based derivation; the NIA does not publish a per-company ratio. Full disclaimer.

Check one insurer's claim record

Pick any of Nepal's 14 insurers to see its derived FY 2081/82 claim settlement figure. For the full ranked comparison, see our claim settlement ratios page.

Death-claim document checklist

Filing a claim is free and you do not need to hire anyone. The 7-day settlement clock starts only once the insurer has every required document, so gather them in full. Tick each item as you collect it.

Claim document checklist
Tick each item as you gather it - the checklist tracks your progress.
All documents ready - you can now submit your claim. For the full step-by-step process, see How to claim life insurance.

If a claim is delayed or denied: escalate to the NIA

The Nepal Insurance Authority (NIA) is the government regulator. It can investigate a delayed or rejected claim and order payment. Filing a complaint is free.

Tel
Toll-free
Email
Email
Web
Website
Map
Address
Kupondole, Lalitpur-10

When writing to the NIA, include your policy number, insurer name, date of claim submission, rejection date (if any), and the specific written reason given.

One-click complaint letter

Copy this pre-filled complaint - then paste it into an email to info@nia.gov.np and fill in your details.

Have a specific question about a claim?

Our verified advisors can help you understand your policy rights and guide you through the claims process.

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