India’s general insurance sector is poised for a transformative decade, with experts forecasting that gross written premiums (GWP) will hit ₹5.4 trillion ($62.2 billion) by 2030. According to the latest data from GlobalData, the industry is expected to maintain a steady 10% compound annual growth rate (CAGR) between 2026 and 2030.
This growth trajectory signals that insurance is evolving from a “grudge purchase” into a critical piece of India’s “invisible infrastructure,” essential for financial resilience in an era of climate change and rapid digitalization.
The Twin Engines: Health and Motor Insurance
In 2025, Health and Motor insurance combined to form a staggering 72.6% of all general insurance premiums.
1. Personal Accident & Health (PA&H)
Health insurance has officially claimed the top spot in the non-life sector, accounting for nearly 41% of all premiums.
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The GST Boost: The removal of GST on retail health policies in September 2025 has been a primary catalyst, significantly lowering the barrier to entry for middle-class households.
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Innovation: New products are shifting focus toward OPD (Out-Patient Department) coverage and wellness incentives to reduce out-of-pocket expenses.
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Challenges: Rapid growth has led to a spike in policyholder grievances, prompting the IRDAI to take a “resolve to protect” stance with stricter penalties for claims-handling lapses.
2. Motor Insurance & The EV Shift
Motor insurance remains the second-largest segment (31.7% of GWP), currently undergoing a structural shift.
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EV Impact: The rise of electric vehicles is introducing more expensive tech components into the claims mix, requiring more sophisticated underwriting.
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Usage-Based Insurance: There is a surge in telematics-linked products where pricing is determined by actual mileage and driver behavior.
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Digital Claims: Claims management is becoming almost entirely paperless, with digital brokers now providing dedicated managers to coordinate directly with garages and surveyors.
Property and Infrastructure: The “Catastrophe” Response
Property insurance accounted for roughly 20.2% of GWP in 2025, but its future growth is tied to climate resilience.
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Disaster Risk Transfer: Several state governments have formalized parametric insurance programs. These allow for near-instant payouts triggered by natural disasters (like floods or cyclones) to families below the poverty line.
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Infra-Spending: With a planned $128.6 billion in infrastructure spending for 2026-27, demand for engineering and construction covers in Tier II and Tier III cities is expected to remain robust.
Regulatory and Strategic Landscape
The IRDAI and the Indian government have cleared the path for this “Double-Digit” growth through several high-impact reforms:
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100% Foreign Direct Investment (FDI): Allowing global capital to flow directly into domestic carriers.
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Composite Licensing: Plans are underway to allow a single entity to offer both life and non-life products, simplifying the experience for consumers.
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Inclusion Focus: Targeted efforts are expanding insurance penetration into MSMEs and non-metro regions.
Risk Factors to Watch
While the outlook is bullish, industry analysts warn of three major headwinds:
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Geopolitical Costs: The West Asia crisis has already increased risk premiums for Marine, Aviation, and Transit (MAT) business.
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Medical Inflation: Standalone health insurers are battling sustained medical inflation, which currently necessitates a 15% annual premium growth just to keep pace.
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Repair Cost Inflation: Reinsurers are revisiting “Nat-Cat” (Natural Catastrophe) pricing assumptions as the cost of vehicle and property repairs continues to climb.
The Verdict: By 2030, the Indian insurance market will be defined by speed (digital claims), scale (₹5.4 trillion), and safety (stronger policyholder protection). For the consumer, this means more affordable health plans and smarter motor policies; for the investor, it represents a high-conviction growth sector that is successfully navigating global volatility.
