about the firm

practices

people

publications

contact us

Contact Us

A 47, Kailash Colony, New Delhi 110048, India

Call Us 24/7: +91 11 45 272 735

Follow Us

Recalibrating Insurance Regulation: A Summary Of Amendments To The Insurance Act, 1938 Under The Sabka Bima Sabki Raksha Bill, 2025

  • Home
  • Updates
  • Recalibrating Insurance Regulation: A Summary Of Amendments To The Insurance Act, 1938 Under The Sabka Bima Sabki Raksha Bill, 2025

The Sabka Bima Sabki Raksha (Amendment of Insurance Laws) Bill, 2025 represents a paradigm shift in the governance of the Indian insurance sector. While the Bill amends multiple statutes, its most consequential changes target the Insurance Act, 1938, moving the sector from a rigid, rule-based regime to a flexible, risk-based framework.

The following is a summary of the key amendments to the Insurance Act, 1938, highlighting their legal implications and direct benefits to policyholders.

  1. 100% Foreign Direct Investment (Section 3AA)

The Amendment:

The Bill inserts a new Section 3AA into the Act, which permits up to 100% Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) in Indian insurance companies, removing the previous cap of 74%. This reform allows global insurers to own and control Indian subsidiaries fully, without the mandatory requirement of a domestic joint venture partner.

Impact & Benefit:

  • Capital Availability: It enables the infusion of long-term global capital required to maintain solvency and expand into under-penetrated rural areas.
  • Policyholder Security: Fully owned subsidiaries of global giants are often better capitalized, reducing the risk of insolvency.
  • Governance Safeguard: While ownership is liberalized, the Act retains a crucial “Indian residency” requirement for key management. At least one of the top executives—the Chairperson, Managing Director, or CEO—must be a resident Indian citizen, ensuring local accountability and cultural alignment.
  1. Restructuring Capital Requirements (Section 6 & 2(8A))

The Amendment:

The Bill amends Section 6 and Section 2(8A) to dismantle the rigid “one-size-fits-all” capital structure.

  • Co-operative Societies: The mandatory minimum paid-up equity capital of ₹100 crore is removed for insurance co-operative societies.
  • Reinsurers: The Net Owned Fund (NOF) requirement for foreign reinsurers setting up branches in India is slashed from 5,000 crore to 1,000 crore.

Impact & Benefit:

  • Micro-Insurance: Removing the ₹100 crore cap for co-operatives fosters the creation of community-based micro-insurers. This allows farmers and trade groups to pool risks and create affordable products tailored to local needs (e.g., crop or artisan insurance).
  • Lower Premiums: Reducing entry barriers for reinsurers increases competition in the reinsurance market. Since primary insurers pass reinsurance costs to consumers, lower reinsurance rates can translate into lower premiums for end-users, particularly in health and property insurance.
  1. Regulation of Commissions (Section 40)

The Amendment:

The Bill amends Section 40 to shift control over commissions from the statute to the regulator. It empowers the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI) to explicitly specify limits on the commission, remuneration, or rewards payable to insurance agents and intermediaries.

Impact & Benefit:

  • Curbing Mis-selling: High upfront commissions often incentivize agents to sell unsuitable products (e.g., expensive investment-linked plans to senior citizens). By empowering IRDAI to cap these payouts and mandate transparency, the amendment attacks the root cause of mis-selling.
  • Cost Efficiency: Rationalizing commissions reduces the overall expense ratio of insurers, which can improve the “surrender value” policyholders receive if they exit a policy early.
  1. Prohibition of Common Directors (Section 32A)

The Amendment:

The Bill substitutes Section 32A to introduce stricter conflict-of-interest norms. It prohibits a Director or Officer of an insurer from simultaneously holding a similar position in:

  1. Another insurance company carrying on the same class of business.
  2. A banking company.
  3. An investment company.

Impact & Benefit:

  • Independence: This prevents “boardroom overlap,” particularly in the Bancassurance channel (where banks sell insurance). It ensures that bank executives on insurance boards do not push the bank’s customers into buying specific insurance products solely to benefit the bank’s bottom line, thereby protecting policyholders from coercive selling.
  1. Intermediary Licensing and Penalties (Section 42D & 102)

The Amendment:

  • Perpetual Licensing (Section 42D): The requirement for intermediaries (agents, brokers) to renew licenses every three years is abolished in favor of a one-time registration system. Crucially, the regulator is now empowered to suspend a license rather than just cancel it.
  • Enhanced Penalties (Section 102): The penalty for non-compliance is significantly increased. The maximum penalty for violations is raised to 10 crore, and a daily penalty of up to ₹1 lakh can be imposed for continuing failures.

Impact & Benefit:

  • Service Continuity: Perpetual licensing ensures that agents do not face administrative lapses, guaranteeing that they remain active to service policyholder claims.
  • Deterrence: The power to suspend (rather than cancel) allows for graded punishment that doesn’t leave customers stranded. Meanwhile, the massive increase in financial penalties acts as a strong deterrent against anti-consumer practices like delaying claims or suppressing material facts.
  1. Delegated Legislation (Section 114)

The Amendment:

Amendments to Section 114 empower the Central Government and IRDAI to frame regulations for operational aspects previously locked in the Act.

Impact & Benefit:

  • Agility: In a rapidly changing financial landscape, this allows the regulator to swiftly update solvency norms or product guidelines (e.g., for cyber insurance or AI-driven risks) without waiting for a parliamentary amendment. This ensures that policyholder protection mechanisms remain contemporary and robust.

Conclusion

The amendments to the Insurance Act, 1938, fundamentally reshape the insurer-policyholder relationship. By removing colonial-era capital rigidities, the Bill democratizes entry for smaller, community-focused players. By liberalizing FDI, it ensures the sector is solvent and flush with capital. Most importantly, by tightening Section 40 (commissions) and Section 32A (governance), and enhancing Section 102 (penalties), the Act creates a formidable legal shield for the consumer, prioritizing the “protection” aspect of the Sabka Bima Sabki Raksha mandate.

Disclaimer

As per the rules of the Bar Council of India, Ampersand Legal is prohibited to solicit work or advertise. By clicking the “I AGREE”, button below, the user acknowledges the following:

1. No Solicitation: There has been no advertisement, personal communication, solicitation, invitation or inducement of any sort whatsoever from Ampersand Legal or any of our members to solicit any work through this website.

2. User Volition: The user wishes to gain more information about Ampersand Legal for his/her own information and use.

3. Information Only: The information about us is provided to the user only on his/her specific request and any information obtained or materials downloaded from this website is completely at the user’s volition and any transmission, receipt or use of this site would not create any lawyer-client relationship.

4. No Liability: The information provided under this website is solely available at your request for informational purposes only and should not be interpreted as soliciting or advertisement. Ampersand Legal is not liable for any consequence of any action taken by the user relying on material / information provided on this website. In cases where the user has any legal issues, he/she in all cases must seek independent legal advice.