Rajeev Mishra, a middle management professional at a private sector firm in Delhi, wanted to transfer a
However, he had a shock when he realised that the life
It means Mishra will have to buy another insurance cover and the current insurance company would, at best, pay him a cash surrender value for the residual tenure of his existing single-premium policy.
This raises a dilemma that a lot of home-loan borrowers in India may not even be aware of. Should they or should they not buy an insurance with a home loan without restricting the future ability to shift the loan?
Here’s a solution. Since buying life insurance with a home loan is surely a wise thing to do, people should surely do so. But instead of buying the insurance from the home loan provider, the customer may simply buy a term plan online (either single premium or annual premium) and the members of his/her family should become the beneficiaries. This way, all objectives will be met:
1. The customer’s life is insured.
2. The family will not be burdened with loan repayment in case of an unfortunate incident.
3. The customer can freely change home loan provider if he/she wishes to.
Another solution could be the regulatory intervention by the RBI and the IRDA to ensure that life policies sold by banks, along with long tenure loans like home loans, should be transferable from one lender to another (as beneficiary) as the customer is paying for these. However, complementary policies paid by the banks could possibly be exempted from this transferability requirement. In the absence of such a regulation, the entire effort to protect customer interest by making loan takeovers easy is likely to get compromised.
This article is written by Gaurav Gupta.
About the author: Gaurav Gupta is the founder and CEO of
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