12 rights every life insurance policyholder has in Nepal
Your insurer and your agent are required to honour these. Most policyholders never know them — which is exactly why this page exists.
Your legal rights as a policyholder
All rights below are grounded in Nepal's Insurance Act 2079, Insurance Regulation 2049, or NIA directives. Sources are cited on each card.
15-day free-look cancellation
You can cancel any new life insurance policy within 15 days of receiving the policy bond and receive a full refund of all premiums paid, minus any medical examination costs. No agent can waive or reduce this window.
Receive your policy bond within 30 days
Your insurer must deliver the signed policy bond — the legal contract — within 30 days of your first premium payment. If it is delayed, write to the insurer's head office requesting delivery. Keep a copy of that letter.
Claim settlement within 30 working days
Insurers must settle or give a written rejection of any valid death or maturity claim within 30 working days of receiving all required documents. Delays beyond this are grounds for a formal NIA complaint.
Know the commission your agent earns
You have the right to ask your insurer — in writing — for a breakdown of agent commission paid on your policy. This disclosure is not automatic, but it must be provided on request. Agents earn 15–35% of your first-year premium depending on the plan type.
Correct errors in your policy bond — free
If your policy bond contains factual errors — name spelling, date of birth, nominee details — you are entitled to a corrected endorsement at no charge, provided the error originated with the insurer or agent. Submit the correction request in writing with supporting ID.
Change your nominee at any time
You can change the nominee named in your policy at any point during the policy term — including after marriage, divorce, or the death of a nominee. Submit a written change-of-nominee form to your branch. There is no charge for this.
A receipt for every premium payment
Every premium payment — annual, half-yearly, or quarterly — must be receipted in writing or electronically. Keep all receipts. They are your primary proof of payment in any dispute or claim. If your insurer does not provide one, demand it.
30-day grace period on a missed premium
If you miss a premium due date, your policy remains in force for at least 30 days (the grace period). Any valid claim arising during the grace period cannot be denied solely because the premium was overdue at the time of the event.
Borrow against your policy after 3 years
For most savings-type policies (endowment, whole life, money back), you can take a policy loan of up to 90% of the current surrender value after 3 completed years of premiums. This is your money. Interest rates are set by your insurer and disclosed in the policy bond.
A surrender value statement within 7 days
After paying premiums for 3 consecutive years, you are entitled to a surrender value if you cancel the policy. Your insurer must provide a written surrender statement — showing the exact amount you will receive — within 7 days of your written request.
Revive a lapsed policy within 5 years
If your policy lapses due to non-payment of premiums, you have up to 5 years to revive it by paying all outstanding premiums plus interest. Your insurer cannot arbitrarily refuse a revival if you meet the stated conditions and your health status has not changed materially.
File a complaint with NIA — free, enforceable
You can lodge a formal complaint with the Nepal Insurance Authority against any insurer for delayed claims, mis-selling, unlicensed agents, or policy disputes. Complaints are free to file. NIA has legal authority to investigate, penalise, and order insurers to pay.
How to file a complaint with NIA — step by step
- Write to your insurer's head office first Send a written complaint detailing the issue. Keep a dated copy. Insurers are legally required to respond within 15 working days. This is a required step before NIA will accept your complaint.
- If unresolved in 15 days, file with NIA Visit NIA headquarters in Durbar Marg, Kathmandu, or call 01-4229032. Bring: your written complaint copy, the insurer's response (or proof of no response), and your policy bond.
- NIA opens a formal investigation NIA will notify the insurer and request their response. Most cases are investigated within 30–60 days. You will be kept informed of the status.
- NIA issues a binding order If NIA finds in your favour, it can order the insurer to pay, plus impose a penalty. Insurers are legally obligated to comply. If the insurer still does not pay, NIA can escalate to the courts.
Now that you know your rights — use them
Compare the plans and insurers that legally can't hide these facts from you.