Family life insurance concept
The Indian government is currently considering a sweeping GST reform under the GST 2.0 plan, which includes a proposal to reduce—or even eliminate—the existing 18% GST on life and health insurance premiums. The aim is to make insurance more affordable and boost penetration in India
While this may provide consumer relief, industry experts warn that the reality may play out differently.
Why the Promise Doesn’t Always Equal the Payoff
Under the current system, insurers collect 18% GST on premiums but can claim Input Tax Credit on GST paid for their business expenses—like agent commissions, reinsurance, rent, technology, call centers, and administration. Removing GST on premiums would also eliminate this offset, driving up costs for insurers.
For example, business costs previously covered by ITC would now become stranded expenses, potentially pushing insurers to raise base premiums.
Term and Health Insurance Plans:
These policies are purely risk-based, with minimal or no investment component. They are likely to see a direct benefit from GST removal.
Traditional Life Plans & ULIPs (Unit-Linked Insurance Plans):
These often include significant savings or investment portions—up to 30–40% in traditional plans and 80–95% in ULIPs. Since GST is only levied on the risk portion, the impact of zero GST on total premium is relatively small.
Several experts caution that without ITC, insurers’ operational costs could rise—leading them to pass these costs on to policyholders through higher premiums. Even with zero GST, the net benefit to the consumer may be limited or negligible.
Meanwhile, some believe that lowering GST to a modest rate such as 5%, while retaining ITC, offers a better balance—ensuring affordability without destabilizing insurer margins
What’s Happening Now?
Government & GST Council Moves
Expert Commentary
Summary Table
Aspect | What Happens with Zero GST |
Term & Health Policies | Likely to benefit more (no investment component) |
ULIPs & Life Policies | Minimal benefit due to investment portion & taxed base |
Insurer ITC | Eliminated—costs could increase without offset |
Premium Pass-through | Mixed—depends on insurer strategy and competitive pressure |
Balanced Alternative | GST at 5% + ITC retention offers better transparency & affordability |
Final Takeaway
Zero GST on life and health insurance premiums sounds consumer-friendly—but benefits may be diluted unless the reform is structured carefully. Term and health-only policies could become noticeably cheaper. But for traditional or ULIP-type plans, savings are likely to be limited. Plus, without ITC, insurers may face cost pressures, which could lead them to adjust base premiums upward.
A more pragmatic solution might be a reduction (e.g., to 5%) coupled with retention of ITC, creating a win-win for both consumers and insurers.
Let’s watch for the GST Council’s final decision in October—its design and execution will be key to making the relief meaningful.
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