Personal Accident Cover in India: Why It’s the Missing Policy

Last verified: June 2026. Insurance terms, waiting periods and rules vary by insurer and change — read the policy wording and confirm current terms before buying. General information, not financial advice.

A personal accident (PA) cover pays a lump sum if an accident causes death or disability — protecting your family’s income from a risk life and health insurance don’t fully address. It’s cheap and widely overlooked.

What it covers

  • Accidental death: a lump sum (the full sum insured) to your nominee.
  • Permanent total disability: typically the full sum insured.
  • Permanent partial disability: a percentage based on the injury.
  • Temporary total disability: a weekly benefit while you can’t work (in many plans).

Why it matters

Life insurance pays only on death; health insurance pays hospital bills. Neither replaces the lost income when an accident leaves you disabled and unable to work. PA cover fills exactly that gap — and a large cover costs surprisingly little.

Standalone vs rider vs government scheme

  • Standalone PA policy: the most comprehensive, with high sums insured and disability benefits.
  • Rider on a term/health plan: convenient but often limited.
  • PMSBY: ₹2 lakh accident cover for ₹20/year — a cheap base, but the sum is small.

How much to take

A common guideline is a sum insured of around 10–15× your annual income, similar to term cover, so your family can absorb a long loss of earnings.

FAQs

What does personal accident insurance cover?

Accidental death and disability (permanent total/partial and often temporary), as a lump sum or weekly benefit.

Isn’t this covered by life and health insurance?

Not fully — life pays on death, health pays bills; PA cover replaces income lost to accidental disability.

How much PA cover do I need?

Often around 10–15× annual income, like term cover.

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