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5 Key Points on the Difference Between Mediclaim and Health Insurance for Your Family Health Plan

15th May 2026
Go to any Indian household and ask about medical insurance. Nine out of ten people will say they have a mediclaim. Ask what it covers, and most will say "hospitalisation and all that." Ask whether it covers a cancer diagnosis or a 45-minute daycare procedure, and most will not know. Medical costs in India are climbing at roughly 14 to 15% annually in 2026. A surgery that cost 2 lakhs three years ago is 3.5 to 4 lakhs today. Sitting on a product you do not fully understand is a problem that surfaces at the worst possible moment. How the Confusion Started The first mediclaim products were launched by government insurers in India in 1986. Basic plans. Hospitalisation covered. Room rent is capped. Disease-specific limits applied. Not much else. Private insurers came in later with fewer restrictions and called their products health insurance. The substance changed considerably, but the names merged in everyday conversation. Today, most people treat both words as synonyms. That confusion is the reason the difference between mediclaim and health insurance is still unclear for many Indian families. Mediclaim is a narrower, older product structure focused almost entirely on hospitalisation. Health insurance is the broader category that mediclaim sits inside. Point 1: Coverage Scope Is Where the Gap Is Widest A mediclaim policy pays for hospitalisation. Admitted for over 24 hours, the policy covers room charges, surgery costs, medicines during the stay, and doctor fees up to the sum insured. Outside that, most basic mediclaim plans stop. Outpatient consultations without admission are excluded. Diagnostic tests done before deciding whether to admit are often out. Post-discharge medicines and follow-ups beyond a narrow window are out. Ambulance charges are excluded in many basic plans. A comprehensive health insurance plan covers a much wider set of situations: Pre-hospitalisation expenses for 30 to 60 days before admission Post-hospitalisation cover for 60 to 90 days after discharge Daycare procedures lasting under 24 hours, like cataract surgery or chemotherapy sessions Ambulance charges Annual health checkups in many plans Most of what makes healthcare expensive day to day happens outside the hospital. Consultations, tests, follow-ups. Mediclaim does not cover any of it. Point 2: Critical Illness Cover Does Not Exist in Basic Mediclaim A standard mediclaim policy covers the hospitalisation portion of a critical illness. Nothing more. Cancer diagnosis. The surgery admission may be covered. Months of chemotherapy as a daycare procedure, follow-up consultations, medicines between cycles, income lost during six months of treatment, none of that sits within the basic mediclaim scope. Comprehensive health insurance plans address this differently. Critical illness cover pays a lump sum on diagnosis. Not on bills submitted. On diagnosis. That money goes toward treatment, replaces income, or covers household expenses throughout recovery. Other add-ons available on health insurance but absent from mediclaim: Maternity and newborn cover OPD cover for consultations without hospitalisation Hospital daily cash benefit Personal accident cover Mental health treatment cover is now mandated under IRDAI guidelines for comprehensive plans Point 3: Sum Insured and Premium Mediclaim plans sit at the lower end of the sum insured range. Basic plans typically offer 1 to 5 lakhs. Narrower coverage means a lower premium. Comprehensive health insurance plans go considerably higher. Options range from 5 lakhs to 1 crore and beyond. Premiums are higher but reflect what is actually being covered. For a family in any Indian metro in 2026, where a single cardiac hospitalisation runs 4 to 6 lakhs and a cancer treatment can reach 20 lakhs across the full course, a 3 lakh mediclaim cover is not a health plan. It is a partial buffer. Side-by-Side Comparison Feature Mediclaim Health Insurance Hospitalisation Covered Covered Pre and post-hospitalisation Limited or excluded Covered for defined periods Daycare procedures Limited Covered Critical illness cover Not available Available as a rider or a standalone OPD expenses Not covered Available in comprehensive plans Riders and add-ons Not available Maternity, accident, daily cash, etc. Sum insured range 1 to 5 lakhs generally 5 lakhs to 1 crore and above Ambulance charges Usually excluded Covered in most plans Annual health checkup Not included Included in many plans Premium Lower Higher reflects broader coverage Point 4: Where Claims Actually Differ Cashless settlement at network hospitals and reimbursement outside the network are available in both. That part is similar. The difference appears when the claim is processed. Pre-admission diagnostic tests costing 25,000 rupees will likely be rejected or partially covered under mediclaim. A comprehensive plan claims them under pre-hospitalisation cover. Post-discharge is another gap. Mediclaim typically covers 30 days post-discharge. Comprehensive plans cover 60 to 90 days. For anyone recovering from major surgery, what happens in those extra weeks is not minor. Point 5: Matching the Product to the Actual Health Plan Need A young person with no dependents, no chronic conditions, and a tight budget may find mediclaim handles the most pressing risk adequately. An unexpected hospitalisation is the primary concern, and basic cover addresses it. For a family with children, elderly parents, or any member managing diabetes or hypertension, mediclaim leaves too many real situations uncovered to serve as the primary health plan. A few things worth checking before buying either: Pre-existing condition waiting period, and when ongoing conditions actually get covered Room rent sublimit and whether it reduces the entire claim proportionately Whether daycare procedures are covered without the 24-hour requirement No-claim bonus structure and whether the sum insured grows in claim-free years Claim settlement ratio of the insurer. Above 97% is reliable. Above 99% is consistently strong. The difference between mediclaim and health insurance shows up in rupees when a real medical situation hits the family.

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