Health Insurance for Kidney Disease in India
Kidney disease is one of the more challenging pre-existing conditions to insure in India, especially at advanced stages. Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) affects approximately 17% of the Indian population (Indian Journal of Nephrology), with most cases remaining undiagnosed until Stage 3 or later. Treatments - particularly dialysis and kidney transplant - are among the most expensive in healthcare.
Insurance availability depends heavily on CKD stage at the time of application:
- Stage 1–2 (mild): Available from most insurers with 15–25% loading
- Stage 3 (moderate): Available from select insurers with 25–40% loading
- Stage 4–5 (severe/dialysis-dependent): Very limited; Arogya Sanjeevani may be the only option
CKD Staging and Insurance Impact
| CKD Stage | GFR (ml/min) | Kidney Function | Insurance Availability | Typical Loading |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stage 1 | ≥90 | Normal function, minor damage | Widely available | 10–15% |
| Stage 2 | 60–89 | Mildly reduced | Widely available | 15–25% |
| Stage 3a | 45–59 | Moderately reduced | Available (select insurers) | 25–35% |
| Stage 3b | 30–44 | Moderately-severely reduced | Limited | 30–40% |
| Stage 4 | 15–29 | Severely reduced | Very limited | 40–60% |
| Stage 5 | <15 | Kidney failure / dialysis | Extremely limited | Usually declined |
Kidney stones are different from CKD. A history of kidney stones with no chronic kidney damage is a much simpler underwriting case - typically 5–10% loading.
Treatment Costs: Why Insurance Matters for Kidney Patients
| Treatment | Cost (Private Hospital) | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Hemodialysis (per session) | ₹2,000–₹5,000 | 3x per week (₹3–₹8 lakh/year) |
| Peritoneal dialysis (monthly) | ₹25,000–₹40,000 | Monthly (₹3–₹5 lakh/year) |
| Kidney transplant (surgery + hospitalization) | ₹8–₹20 lakh | One-time |
| Post-transplant immunosuppressants | ₹15,000–₹30,000/month | Lifelong |
| AV fistula creation (for dialysis) | ₹30,000–₹80,000 | One-time |
Dialysis alone can cost ₹3–₹8 lakh per year. Without insurance, this becomes a recurring financial burden that compounds year after year.
What's Covered and What's Not
Covered (After PED Waiting Period)
- Hospitalization for kidney-related complications
- Dialysis sessions (when done during hospitalization)
- Kidney transplant surgery and hospitalization
- Post-surgical hospitalization and follow-up
- AV fistula creation and related procedures
Generally NOT Covered
- Outpatient dialysis (day care - some plans cover this)
- Post-transplant immunosuppressant medications (outpatient expense)
- Kidney donation-related expenses for the donor (unless specified)
- Experimental treatments
Important Nuance: Dialysis Coverage
Many modern plans now cover dialysis as a day care procedure - meaning you don't need 24-hour hospitalization. Check if your plan covers day care dialysis, as many leading insurers now include it in their day care coverage.
Which Plans Accept Kidney Disease Patients?
Several insurers offer specialised plans that can cover applicants with kidney disease. The right option depends heavily on your CKD stage, your overall health profile, and whether you are dialysis-dependent or post-transplant, so the best plan is matched to your specific situation rather than picked from a list.
Eligibility, premium loading, and waiting periods vary significantly from case to case. To find the specialised plans you qualify for, book a call with our advisors and we'll walk you through the options and the application.
Kidney Stones vs Chronic Kidney Disease
Kidney stones (nephrolithiasis) are common and usually a one-time or intermittent issue. Insurance treatment is very different from CKD:
| Factor | Kidney Stones | Chronic Kidney Disease |
|---|---|---|
| Insurance loading | 5–10% | 15–60% (stage-dependent) |
| Availability | Universal | Stage-dependent |
| Treatment cost | ₹30,000–₹1.5L (lithotripsy/surgery) | ₹3–₹20L/year (dialysis/transplant) |
| Recurrence risk | Moderate (50% within 10 years) | Progressive (worsens over time) |
If you've had kidney stones but no chronic kidney damage (normal GFR, no proteinuria), your insurance journey is straightforward.
How to Disclose Kidney Conditions
Disclose:
- CKD stage and GFR level (from latest kidney function test)
- Serum creatinine and blood urea levels
- Proteinuria / albumin-to-creatinine ratio
- All kidney-related procedures (dialysis, fistula, transplant)
- Underlying cause (diabetes, hypertension, polycystic kidney disease)
- Current medications (including immunosuppressants post-transplant)
- Kidney stone history and treatment
Why it matters: Kidney conditions are easily verified through routine blood tests. Hiding CKD and filing a claim later guarantees rejection.
Read more: Why full disclosure protects you
Post-Transplant Insurance
If you've had a kidney transplant:
- Waiting period: Standard 2–4 year PED waiting period applies
- Loading: 20–40% above base premium
- What's covered after waiting: Re-transplant if needed, hospitalization for rejection episodes, related complications
- What's NOT covered: Daily immunosuppressant medications (outpatient), routine post-transplant monitoring (outpatient)
- Recommended cover: Minimum ₹25 lakh - transplant-related complications can be expensive
Back to: Health Insurance Guide | Pre-Existing Disease Disclosure
Have kidney disease? Let us find the right plan. Our advisors know which insurers accept different CKD stages and can navigate the underwriting process for you. Free consultation.
FAQs - Health Insurance for Kidney Disease
Is dialysis covered by health insurance?
Yes, most modern plans cover dialysis as a day care procedure. However, if dialysis is related to a pre-existing kidney condition, coverage begins only after the PED waiting period (up to 3 years). Arogya Sanjeevani applies the same PED waiting period for dialysis if linked to a pre-existing kidney condition.
Can I get health insurance after a kidney transplant?
Yes, though options are limited. Expect 20–40% premium loading and standard PED waiting periods. Arogya Sanjeevani is typically available even with chronic kidney conditions, but coverage for kidney-related claims begins only after the PED waiting period (up to 36 months per IRDAI's May 2024 cap).
How much health insurance cover do kidney patients need?
Minimum ₹25 lakh. Kidney treatments are expensive and recurring - dialysis alone costs ₹3–₹8 lakh/year. A transplant can cost ₹8–₹20 lakh. Read how much cover you need.
Are kidney stones covered by health insurance?
Yes. Kidney stone treatment (lithotripsy, ureteroscopy, surgical removal) is covered. If stones are a pre-existing condition, coverage begins after the PED waiting period.
Is polycystic kidney disease (PKD) insurable?
PKD is insurable at early stages with loading. At advanced stages with CKD, availability becomes limited. Early application (before progression) is strongly recommended.
