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Giving employee health insurance plans an add-on boost

2 days ago 4

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Employer-provided health insurance, commonly known as group health cover, is an important benefit that many organisations offer to safeguard employees during medical emergencies. It helps in reducing the financial burden of hospitalisation, treatments and other healthcare expenses.

While this type of coverage is valuable and often cost-effective, it may not always provide comprehensive protection. It is important to understand the gaps in coverage and explore ways to strengthen the basic group cover.

Personal covers

At the outset, it must be understood that a personal cover is non-negotiable, even with an existing group cover. A personal health cover, or even better, a family health cover, addresses the two main sticking points in a group cover: Continuity and coverage.

As is evident, a group cover ceases the day the employee leaves the organisation. Relying on a group cover implies that health protection is exposed to the volatility of employment, which is exactly the risk one aims to avoid with health insurance. A personal cover that is up to date on payments provides coverage even during phases of job volatility.

Coverage is also one of the least understood aspects of group covers. Group cover is, by design, aimed at covering basic and routine healthcare needs. Group coverage is thus limited in amount and is not designed to handle complex care such as oncology, higher-order cardiology, or kidney-related ailments, for instance. These are therapies for which physical recovery may be possible, but continued productive employment may remain uncertain and hence may not fall under the purview of group insurance.

Covering the elderly

If the organisation is providing cover for the elderly, it is prudent to opt for the same, despite having personal cover for them. Group covers have one major advantage compared with personal covers: Less resistance at the time of claims.

Personal health insurance for the elderly is expensive and comes with a host of conditions. Waiting periods, for instance. This could be a PED, or pre-existing disease, waiting period of three years, or a slow-growing disease, such as cataract or knee replacement, with a waiting period of one year. Group covers can start protecting members from the first day, owing to the large number of people covered. Also, most covers for the elderly include a deductible, either to reduce the cost or as a non-negotiable feature. This is also avoided in group covers. Also, as an intangible benefit, companies employ TPAs, or third-party administrators, that liaise between the claimant and the insurance company.

The professional intermediary eases the claim experience compared with personal health insurance, where, at the time of claim, personal effort is required to process the claim at the policyholder’s end. This support can extend to unresolved claims, documentation, delays and partial approvals.

Add-ons and riders

Similarly, if certain add-ons or riders, like critical illness, consumables, or OPD covers, are available in a group insurance plan, or even a personal cover, they should be considered.

A critical illness rider gives you a lump-sum amount if you are diagnosed with a serious illness listed in the policy. Unlike regular health insurance, which pays only for medical expenses, this rider gives you money that you can use in any way you need. It can help you pay for treatment, manage daily expenses, or make up for lost income while you recover. This add-on can be especially useful for people who may have a higher risk of certain illnesses because of their family medical history.

A consumables add-on is a valuable feature that policyholders may consider. Consumables are disposable items used during treatment and are generally excluded from standard health insurance coverage. Consequently, these expenses are often borne by the policyholder despite claim approval. As they can account for 8-10 per cent of a hospital bill, particularly in the post-Covid context, this add-on can help reduce out-of-pocket expenditure.

OPD consultation charges can be covered by OPD cover add-ons. An OPD cover of ₹10,000 or more per annum can enhance the use-case of a group cover for employees.

Super top-up

In circumstances where an individual relies exclusively on employer-provided group health insurance, it is advisable to also consider a super top-up health insurance plan to enhance overall financial protection against high medical expenses.

Super top-up insurance can be purchased externally. These plans include a deductible limit, which is generally set at the base policy’s sum insured limit. When the deductible limit, which is the group cover’s limit, is breached, these plans can be utilised to cover the remaining expenses. A super top-up plan with a ₹3-lakh deductible and ₹25-lakh cover costs around ₹5,000-10,000 per annum, based on the insurer. This can be a low-cost way to enhance a group cover cost-effectively, in the absence of personal health cover.

Published on June 6, 2026

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