Home » Business » GST on Insurance: Premiums May Rise 3-5% Despite Tax Cut – Report

GST on Insurance: Premiums May Rise 3-5% Despite Tax Cut – Report

by Priya Shah – Business Editor

GST Cut on Health Insurance​ May Lead to Premium Increases, Report Finds

Recent decisions by teh GST Council to eliminate the 18% tax on life and health insurance premiums, effective September 22, 2025,​ are facing scrutiny. While intended to lower costs for consumers, a new report from Kotak Institutional Equities Research suggests the move‌ could inadvertently lead to premium increases of‍ up to ‌5%.The core issue stems from the loss of input tax credit (ITC) for insurance companies. Currently, these companies claim ITC on ⁤various operational expenses ⁤including distribution commissions, reinsurance, and promotional costs. While⁤ reinsurance will‌ now also‌ be exempt⁣ from GST, other expenses will continue to be taxed, and ⁢the report indicates insurance companies are unlikely ‍to ‌be⁣ able to leverage the benefits of an inverted tax structure (ITS) due to the ‍’exempt’ status of individual policies.

To offset this⁢ loss of ITC and maintain profitability,the ⁢report estimates health insurance companies ⁣may need to increase tariffs on both new and existing retail policies by ⁢3-5%. This adjustment is described as a “back-of-the-envelope calculation” to achieve margin neutrality.

Despite the potential for tariff hikes, the report highlights a positive outcome: the elimination of GST ⁣could ⁣result in an overall 12-15% reduction in health insurance costs for​ consumers, potentially stimulating demand. This calculation assumes ​the 0% GST rate is combined with the projected 3-5% tariff adjustments.

Currently, health insurance policies ‌are subject to an 18% GST. The report details that companies currently utilize ITC‌ on services ⁣like ⁢distribution commissions,reinsurance,and operational expenses.​ Tho, the report ​cautions ⁣that the benefit of ‍the inverted​ tax structure (ITS) is unlikely ⁤to be available to insurance⁣ companies as individual policies are ​now ‘exempt’ and the‍ government has not yet notified ITS benefits for the insurance sector.

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