How to Check the Critical Illness List Before You Buy a 5 Crore Term Insurance Plan
Mumbai, 29th June 2026: Most people buying term insurance do one thing. They compare premiums. They pick the cheapest one and move on.
Nobody reads the critical illness list. That is where things go wrong later.
If you are buying a 5 crore term insurance plan, spend at least an hour going through what it actually covers. Not just the premium. What diseases are on the list? How they are defined. What gets a claim rejected?
What Is a Critical Illness Rider
The other thing about a term insurance policy is that you have the option to purchase a critical illness rider in addition to that.
In simple terms, the base insurance covers the beneficiary upon your death. The rider will be paid out to you when you contract a specified disease while still alive. The proceeds from the rider can be used to cover treatment, loss of income, and daily living costs.
For the rider benefit to be paid, you need to be afflicted by an illness that is contained in the critical illness list of your policy.
Why Most People Skip This
The list looks boring. It has medical names most people have never heard of. So they trust the agent, ask no questions, and sign.
That trust can be very expensive. Some plans show 50 diseases, but most are rare. Common ones, like early-stage cancer or a mild stroke, may only be covered under strict conditions. You find out only when you file a claim. By then, nothing can be done.
Step 1: Ask for the Full Policy Document
Never depend on the brochure. A brochure may say something such as “provides coverage for 40 illnesses”, but will not specify what the 40 illnesses are.
Always request the policy itself or the rider. This is where you can find the complete list and definitions of illnesses. Read through all of it.
Step 2: Check If the Common Diseases Are There
Some diseases cause most critical illness claims in India. Make sure all of these are covered.
| Disease | What to Look For |
| Cancer (including early stages) | Check which stages qualify for payout |
| Heart attack | Should be covered |
| Stroke | Check the severity conditions carefully |
| Kidney failure | Should be covered |
| Bypass surgery | Should be covered |
| Organ transplant (liver and kidney) | Should be covered |
| Permanent paralysis | Should be covered |
| Coma | Should be covered |
If two or three of these are missing, do not buy that plan, no matter how attractive the premium looks.
Step 3: Read the Definition. Not Just the Name.
Two plans can both list cancer. But one pays from Stage 3. The other from Stage 2. Doctors are catching cancer earlier now. If your plan skips early stages, you can get a confirmed diagnosis and still get zero payout.
Same with stroke. Some plans only pay if there is permanent disability. A stroke that stops you from working for months but is not classed as permanent may not qualify at all.
Read the exact condition written for each disease. Not just the name.
Step 4: Go Through the Exclusions Slowly
Every plan has conditions under which it will not pay. Common ones are diseases you had before buying the plan, illnesses from alcohol or drug use, conditions from birth, self-caused injuries, and HIV or AIDS related conditions.
Those are standard and fine.
The problem is when a plan adds extra exclusions. Some exclude certain types of cancer. Some exclude kidney failure caused by diabetes, even though that is the most common cause in India. Read every line. Do not skip anything.
Step 5: Use Your Family Health History
Write down every serious illness in your close family. Parents, grandparents, siblings. Heart attacks, cancer, kidney problems, stroke, and diabetes complications.
Now check that list against the critical illness list in the plan.
If heart disease runs in your family, check cardiac coverage carefully. If kidney problems are common, see whether diabetes related kidney failure is excluded.
This shows you where the gaps are before you commit to anything.
Step 6: Compare Three Plans Side by Side
Do not go with the first plan you see. Put three plans side by side and look at actual coverage.
| Feature | Plan A | Plan B | Plan C |
| Total conditions covered | 36 | 54 | 41 |
| Early-stage cancer covered | No | Yes | Yes |
| Survival clause (days) | 30 | 15 | 30 |
| Wait for pre-existing illness | 4 years | 2 years | 3 years |
| Payout method | Lump sum | Lump sum | In parts |
A plan with better definitions is worth more than one with a longer list of diseases that almost nobody gets.
Step 7: Find Out When Your Cover Starts
Most riders have a 90-day waiting period from the date you buy. Any diagnosis during those 90 days means no payout.
Some plans also wait 2 to 4 years before covering pre-existing conditions. If you have diabetes or high blood pressure already, check how that affects your cover and when it actually kicks in. Write those dates down.
Checklist Before Locking In Your 5 Crore Term Insurance Plan
Go through this before a 5 crore term insurance plan:
- Got the full policy document and not just a brochure
- All common diseases from Step 2 are on the covered list
- Read the definition of each major illness carefully
- Read the full exclusions section word by word
- Matched the illness list to your family health history
- Compared at least three plans on actual coverage quality
- Know when your waiting period ends
Last Word
Paying premiums for 25 years on a plan that rejects your claim is a waste. The critical illness list is what separates a plan that actually works from one that does not.
A 5-crore term insurance plan is a long-term commitment. You will be paying for it every year for decades. The least you can do is know exactly what you are paying for. Most claims get rejected because the buyer never read what was covered.
