Car Insurance Online Renewal — Complete Process 2026
Everything you need to renew your car insurance online in 2026 — compare insurers, save on premium, protect your NCB, and avoid costly mistakes.
Car Insurance Online Renewal — Complete Process 2026
My friend Vikram got a call from his old insurance agent last month. "Sir, your car insurance is expiring next week. Should I renew it? Same plan as last year — ₹18,500."
Vikram almost said yes. Out of habit. Then he spent 15 minutes on two insurer websites, compared the same coverage, and renewed online for ₹11,200 — saving ₹7,300 without losing a single benefit.
That agent wasn't scamming him. He was just adding a distribution cost that Vikram didn't need to pay. When you renew car insurance online directly, you cut out that cost entirely.
This guide covers everything — how to renew online step by step, how to compare insurers, what NCB is and how to protect it, which add-ons are worth buying, and the mistakes that cost people thousands every year.
Don't Let Your Policy Lapse — Read This First
If your car insurance has already expired, you cannot drive the car legally in India. More importantly, driving without valid insurance is punishable with a fine of ₹2,000 for first offence and ₹4,000 for second offence under the Motor Vehicles Act, 2019 — plus your NCB (No Claim Bonus) resets to zero after 90 days of lapse. Renew today.
📋 Table of Contents
- Third Party vs Comprehensive — Which to Renew?
- NCB — No Claim Bonus Explained
- Premium Calculator — Estimate Your Renewal Cost
- Best Insurers for Car Insurance Renewal 2026
- Step-by-Step Renewal Process — Interactive Tracker
- Add-ons Worth Buying (and Which to Skip)
- Mistakes That Cost Indians Money at Renewal
- How to Renew Lapsed Car Insurance
- Frequently Asked Questions
Third Party vs Comprehensive — Which to Renew?
Before you renew, make sure you're choosing the right type of policy. Many people blindly renew the same plan every year without checking if it still makes sense.
When to Choose Third Party Only
- Car is older than 7–10 years and market value is very low (below ₹1.5–2 lakh)
- You only want to meet the legal minimum requirement
- Car is rarely driven and parked in a safe area
When to Choose Comprehensive
- Car is less than 7 years old — own damage cover is worth the premium
- You drive regularly in heavy traffic or flood-prone areas
- Car has a loan outstanding — most banks require comprehensive cover
- You want peace of mind against theft, fire, or natural disasters
💡 IRDAI Rule — Minimum Insurance Required
As per IRDAI (Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India), Third Party insurance is mandatory for all vehicles on Indian roads under the Motor Vehicles Act. Driving without at least TP insurance is a punishable offence. Comprehensive insurance, however, is optional — but strongly recommended for cars under 7 years old.
NCB — No Claim Bonus: Your Most Valuable Asset at Renewal
This is the most important concept to understand before renewing — and the one most people ignore.
NCB (No Claim Bonus) is a discount you earn on your Own Damage (OD) premium for each claim-free year. It accumulates over 5 years and can reduce your premium by up to 50%. Here's the official NCB structure as per IRDAI:
| Claim-Free Years | NCB Discount | Example: OD Premium ₹10,000 | You Pay |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 years (new policy) | 0% | ₹10,000 | ₹10,000 |
| 1 year | 20% | ₹10,000 | ₹8,000 |
| 2 years | 25% | ₹10,000 | ₹7,500 |
| 3 years | 35% | ₹10,000 | ₹6,500 |
| 4 years | 45% | ₹10,000 | ₹5,500 |
| 5+ years | 50% | ₹10,000 | ₹5,000 — Maximum Savings! |
⚠️ NCB Protection — 3 Things You Must Know
- NCB transfers with you, not the car. If you sell your car and buy a new one, your NCB follows you to the new policy.
- Any claim resets NCB to zero. Even a small claim of ₹5,000 costs you your 50% NCB — which could be worth ₹8,000+ in savings. Think twice before claiming for minor damages.
- Policy lapse kills your NCB. If your insurance expires and you don't renew within 90 days, your NCB resets to zero. Renew on time, always.
Premium Calculator — Estimate Your Renewal Cost
Get a quick estimate of your car insurance renewal premium before you visit any insurer's website:
Best Insurers for Car Insurance Renewal 2026
I compared the top motor insurers on claim settlement ratio, cashless garage network, and digital experience. Here are the best options for renewal in 2026:
You can compare real-time quotes from all insurers at IRDAI's motor insurance portal or directly on each insurer's website. Don't use aggregators for final purchase — go direct for the best price.
Step-by-Step Car Insurance Renewal Process — Interactive Tracker
Follow these steps to renew your car insurance online in under 10 minutes. Track your progress below:
Before opening any insurer's website, keep these ready:
- Current insurance policy document — has your policy number, NCB %, insurer name
- Vehicle Registration Certificate (RC) — has your car's RTO registration number, chassis number, engine number
- Previous year's claim history — if you made a claim, your NCB resets
- Aadhaar / PAN — for KYC verification
- Car's current market value — check on CarWale or CarDekho for IDV reference
Don't have your old policy? Search your email inbox for the insurer's name — policies are almost always sent via email. Or call your insurer's customer care with your registration number to retrieve it.
Check your current insurer's renewal quote first — log in to their website or app with your policy number. Note the premium quoted.
Then compare on 2–3 other insurer websites with the same coverage. If the difference is more than 15–20%, switching is worth it.
When to stick with current insurer:
- Price difference is under 10%
- Your regular garage is in their cashless network
- You've had a smooth claim experience with them
When to switch:
- Another insurer offers same coverage 20%+ cheaper
- You had a bad claim experience
- New insurer has a better garage network in your area
Important: Your NCB transfers smoothly when you switch. Ask your current insurer for an NCB Certificate — it's mandatory and they must provide it free of charge.
IDV is your car's current market value — it's what the insurer pays if your car is stolen or totalled. Setting it right is crucial.
- Too low IDV — lower premium, but you get less money in a total loss claim
- Too high IDV — higher premium, but insurer won't pay more than market value anyway
- Right IDV — current market value of your car (check CarWale or CarDekho for used car prices)
Most insurer websites auto-calculate IDV based on IRDAI depreciation tables. You can adjust it within a 10–15% range — set it to match the realistic resale value of your car.
Insurers typically offer IDV flexibility: you can set it anywhere between the minimum (lower than standard) and maximum (higher than standard) — but stay close to actual market value for honest coverage.
Add-ons increase your premium but provide valuable coverage. Here's what to add and what to skip:
✅ Worth adding for most people:
- Zero Depreciation Cover — Without this, the insurer deducts depreciation from your claim. With zero dep, you get the full replacement cost. Essential for cars under 5 years old. Costs ₹1,000–3,000 extra.
- Roadside Assistance (RSA) — Towing, flat tyre help, fuel delivery. Very cheap (~₹300–500) and genuinely useful in India.
- Engine and Gearbox Protection — Covers internal engine damage due to water ingression or oil leakage. Worth it in flood-prone cities like Mumbai, Chennai, Hyderabad.
❌ Usually not worth adding:
- Return to Invoice — Only worth it in the first 2–3 years when your car's market value is close to invoice price. Skip for older cars.
- Tyre Protection — Usually cheap but very limited conditions for claim. Skip unless you drive on very rough roads.
On the insurer's renewal form, you'll need to enter:
- Vehicle registration number — e.g. MH01AB1234
- Chassis number and Engine number — from your RC book
- RTO location — where car is registered
- Owner details — name, mobile, email, Aadhaar/PAN
- Previous policy details — policy number, expiry date, NCB %
- Any modifications — CNG kit, LPG kit (must be declared — affects premium)
Most insurers now auto-populate vehicle details from your registration number via the VAHAN government database. Enter your registration number and most fields fill automatically.
You'll be asked to declare your NCB percentage. This must be accurate — it's verified against your previous insurer's records.
- If you made a claim in the past year → declare 0% NCB
- If you're switching insurer → you need NCB certificate from old insurer (request it before renewal)
- If you're renewing with the same insurer → NCB is auto-populated from their records
🚫 Never Falsely Claim Higher NCB
Declaring 50% NCB when you actually made a claim is insurance fraud under the Insurance Act. At claim time, insurers verify NCB with the Insurance Information Bureau (IIB). False NCB declaration = claim rejection + policy cancellation + legal action.
If you're renewing with the same insurer, no inspection is required — skip this step.
If you're switching to a new insurer, they may require a car inspection to assess current condition before issuing a comprehensive policy. Modern insurers handle this digitally:
- Self-inspection app — Most top insurers (ICICI Lombard InstaSpect, Bajaj Allianz) have apps where you take photos of all 4 sides of the car, dashboard odometer, and chassis plate
- Takes about 10–15 minutes
- Approval is usually instant or within 30 minutes
- Physical inspection is rare now — most insurers accept self-inspection
If your policy expired less than 90 days ago — self-inspection app works. If expired more than 90 days ago, the insurer may require a physical inspection by a surveyor at your location.
Review the final premium summary — check IDV, NCB applied, add-ons, and total premium. If all correct:
- Pay via UPI, Net Banking, or Credit/Debit Card
- Policy document is emailed instantly after payment
- Download the PDF and save to DigiLocker — legally valid digital copy accepted by traffic police
- Your policy number and cover note are valid from the moment of payment
Pro tip: Screenshot your policy details page immediately. If there's any payment issue, you have proof of the transaction. Also save the insurer's claim helpline number in your phone — you'll need it quickly if you ever have an accident.
Add-Ons Worth Buying — Quick Reference
| Add-On | What It Covers | Approx Cost | Best For | Worth It? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zero Depreciation | Full claim without depreciation deduction | ₹1,000–3,500/yr | Cars under 5 years | Must Have |
| Roadside Assistance | Towing, flat tyre, fuel delivery, key loss | ₹300–600/yr | Everyone | Yes |
| Engine & Gearbox Protection | Water ingression, oil leak, hydrostatic lock | ₹800–2,000/yr | Flood-prone cities | Yes |
| NCB Protect | Protects NCB after 1 claim | ₹500–1,500/yr | Those with 35–50% NCB | Situational |
| Return to Invoice | Invoice value in total loss/theft | ₹1,500–4,000/yr | Cars under 2 years | For New Cars Only |
| Consumables Cover | Nuts, bolts, oil, coolant in claims | ₹400–800/yr | Zero dep holders | Optional |
| Tyre Protection | Tyre damage not caused by accident | ₹300–700/yr | Rough road drivers | Usually Skip |
| Key & Lock Replacement | Lost or stolen keys replacement | ₹200–400/yr | Careless key handlers | Skip |
Mistakes That Cost Indians Money at Car Insurance Renewal
❌ Mistake 1: Auto-Renewing Without Comparing
This is how Vikram (from our opening story) almost paid ₹7,300 more than he needed to. Insurers bank on inertia — the assumption that you'll just click "renew" without checking alternatives. Spend 10 minutes comparing quotes from 2–3 insurers every single year. Premiums vary significantly for the same coverage.
❌ Mistake 2: Setting IDV Too Low to Save on Premium
Some people deliberately set a very low IDV to reduce the premium. This feels like a win until your car gets stolen or totalled — and you receive ₹2 lakh for a car worth ₹6 lakh. Set IDV accurately. The premium difference for correct IDV is usually small; the claim difference is enormous.
❌ Mistake 3: Not Adding Zero Depreciation on New/Near-New Car
Without zero dep cover, the insurer deducts depreciation when settling a claim. For a 3-year-old car, they might deduct 30–50% on certain parts. A bumper replacement that costs ₹15,000 might get you only ₹8,000. Zero dep cover typically costs ₹1,500–2,500 extra per year — worth every rupee for cars under 5 years.
❌ Mistake 4: Making Small Claims That Kill Your NCB
At 50% NCB, you save ~₹5,000–8,000 per year on OD premium. If you claim for a ₹3,000 scratch repair, you lose that NCB — potentially costing you far more over the next 5 years than the claim was worth. Do the math before claiming for any damage under ₹15,000–20,000. Self-paying minor repairs is often the smarter financial decision.
❌ Mistake 5: Forgetting to Renew Before Expiry
If your policy expires, you can't drive legally. If you miss the 90-day window, your NCB resets to zero. Set a calendar reminder 30 days before your policy expiry date. Most insurers also send renewal reminders — don't ignore them. The 10 minutes it takes to renew online is always worth it.
How to Renew a Lapsed Car Insurance Policy
If your policy has already expired, don't panic — but act quickly.
Expired Less Than 90 Days Ago
- Most insurers accept digital self-inspection (photos via app) for policies lapsed under 90 days
- NCB is still valid if you renew before 90 days
- Process is similar to regular renewal — just do self-inspection first
- Don't drive the car until the new policy is active
Expired More Than 90 Days Ago
- NCB resets to 0% — this is unavoidable after 90 days
- Physical inspection by a surveyor is required before new policy issuance
- Insurer sends a surveyor to inspect the car at your location (usually within 2–3 days)
- After inspection approval, policy is issued normally
- You cannot renew with your old insurer if policy lapsed over 90 days — must apply as fresh policy
⚠️ Meanwhile — Don't Drive
Between your policy expiry and new policy issuance, do not drive the car. Even a short trip is a legal risk. Call a cab or use public transport until your new policy document is received via email.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Renew Today — 10 Minutes, Done
Car insurance renewal doesn't need to be complicated. Open two or three insurer websites, enter your registration number, compare the premium for the same coverage, pick the best one, pay online, and you're done.
The key things to remember:
- Compare every year — don't auto-renew blindly
- Protect your NCB — don't claim for minor damages under ₹15,000
- Set IDV accurately — low IDV saves a little premium, costs a lot in claims
- Add zero dep — if your car is under 5 years old, it's worth it
- Renew before expiry — 90-day rule protects your NCB
Use the calculator above to estimate your premium, follow the step tracker to complete renewal, and you'll be back on the road legally — and with the right coverage — in under 10 minutes.
📌 Disclaimer
Insurer details, premium estimates, and claim settlement ratios in this article are based on publicly available data as of May 2026. Premiums vary based on car model, RTO zone, age, IDV, and add-ons selected. TP premium is fixed by IRDAI. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or insurance advice. Verify current rates on the insurer's official website. Shoonyas.in does not receive commissions from any insurer.