- Restoration benefits activate after full exhaustion of base sum insured and additions
- Restored cover often applies only to later claims, not the first hospitalisation
- Some policies limit restoration to different illnesses or other insured members
"100% restoration" and "unlimited restoration" health insurance features often attract buyers looking for higher cover after a claim. But these benefits do not always mean policyholders get endless or automatic protection when medical costs rise.
The real value of these clauses depends on triggers, claim type, illness conditions and policy-year limits. Missing these details can leave families with less cover than expected during a medical emergency.
Many buyers assume restoration means the sum insured doubles immediately after the first claim. In most cases, the restored amount becomes available only after the original cover has been fully used.
It usually applies to later claims, not the first hospitalisation. It also may not help when a single treatment bill crosses the available insured amount.
How It Works
This feature generally activates only after the base sum insured and any built-up additions are exhausted. Even then, insurers may restrict use of the restored amount.
Some policies allow restoration only for a different illness or for another insured member under the same plan. Others may permit claims linked to the same illness, depending on the product terms.
That makes it important to check how the clause works before relying on it as extra protection.
Why It Matters
Not all insurers follow the same structure for restoration benefits. Terms can differ on whether the trigger starts after full exhaustion or after partial use of the insured amount.
A partial-use trigger may help policyholders facing back-to-back medical expenses, as renewed cover can become available sooner.
Buyers should also check whether restoration can be used once or multiple times in a policy year. Some plans cap the number of restorations, while others offer wider usage within the annual term.
Where claims relate to the same illness, insurers may require a gap between hospital admissions before treating them as separate claims.
What Next
Another common misunderstanding is that unused restored cover carries forward into the next year. In practice, restoration is usually limited to the current policy period.
It is designed to support multiple claims within that year. At renewal, the sum insured resets and any unused restored amount lapses.
For buyers comparing health insurance plans, the headline promise matters less than the fine print. Checking restoration rules before purchase can help avoid surprises when a claim arises.
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