Every day, more than 1.89 crore passengers board Indian trains. Yet until last week, a large majority of them — those who walk up to a physical reservation counter and buy a ticket the traditional way — had been quietly denied a basic layer of financial protection that their online-booking counterparts could access with a single checkbox click costing just 45 paise. The Supreme Court of India has now called time on that disparity.

The Ruling

On 12 March 2026, a Supreme Court bench of Justices Ahsanuddin Amanullah and R. Mahadevan held that the method of purchasing a railway ticket — online or at a counter — cannot determine whether a passenger receives the benefit of travel insurance. The Court directed the Ministry of Railways and IRCTC to immediately extend the Optional Travel Insurance Scheme (OTIS) to all counter-ticket holders.

Bench: Justices Ahsanuddin Amanullah & R. Mahadevan | Next Hearing: 1 April 2026

Max Cover
₹10L
Accidental death / total disability
Premium
45p
Base ₹0.38 + 7p IGST
Daily Passengers
1.89Cr
Across all Indian trains
Claims Settled
333
₹27.22 Cr paid (last 5 yrs)
Railway Act Cover
₹8L
Separate statutory compensation

Why the Court Had to Step In

IRCTC quietly rolled out OTIS around 2016. The scheme was cleverly designed for the digital world: at checkout on the IRCTC website or app, passengers saw an opt-in checkbox. A tiny premium of 45 paise — the cheapest insurance sold in India — was added to their fare, and in return they got a ₹10 lakh accident cover for the entire journey.

The problem? The same facility simply did not exist at physical reservation counters. Roughly 35–40% of all reserved-class tickets in India are still bought over the counter, disproportionately by older passengers, rural travellers, those without smartphones or internet access, and first-generation rail users. For years, these passengers remained invisible to the scheme.

“The mode of purchase of a railway ticket is not a rational nexus or a reasonable classification to grant Rail Travel Insurance. Such differentiation is impermissible discrimination.” — Supreme Court Bench, Justices Amanullah & Mahadevan, 12 March 2026

The government’s defence was administrative: identifying counter-ticket passengers for insurance enrollment was difficult, and there was a risk of identity-based misuse. The Court rejected both arguments emphatically, noting that modern technology is more than capable of handling biometric verification and digital enrollment at reservation counters — the same technology, it pointedly observed, that the Railways already uses for Aadhaar-linked Tatkal bookings and passenger reservation system (PRS) terminals across every zonal railway office in the country.

⚖️

Article 14 Angle

The bench anchored its ruling in Article 14 of the Constitution — the right to equality before law. Denying counter-ticket buyers access to an affordable safety net available to online buyers, the Court held, created an arbitrary and irrational class distinction with no justifiable basis.

What the ₹10 Lakh Cover Actually Includes — In Full Detail

Before we analyse the ruling’s implications, it is worth understanding precisely what OTIS actually covers. Many passengers who have opted in over the years remain fuzzy on the specifics. Here is the complete breakdown:

Coverage Head What It Covers Maximum Payout
Accidental Death Death caused by a train accident during the journey (derailment, collision, fire, terrorist attack) ₹10,00,000
Permanent Total Disability Complete and irrecoverable loss of both hands, both feet, both eyes, or a combination thereof ₹10,00,000
Permanent Partial Disability Loss of one limb or one eye; graded payout based on disability severity Up to ₹7,50,000
Hospitalisation Expenses Actual medical expenses incurred due to injuries sustained in a covered accident Up to ₹2,00,000
Mortal Remains Transportation Cost of transporting the deceased’s body from the accident site to their hometown ₹10,000
📌

Important Distinction

The ₹10 lakh OTIS cover is separate from and in addition to the ₹8 lakh statutory compensation payable under the Railway Accidents and Untoward Incidents (Compensation) Rules, 2016. In the worst case, a passenger’s family could receive up to ₹18 lakh in total — ₹10L from OTIS plus ₹8L from the statutory railway compensation.

Who Are the Insurance Partners?

IRCTC does not underwrite the insurance itself — it acts purely as a facilitator and distribution channel. The actual risk is carried by a panel of IRDAI-registered general insurers that rotate on a tender basis. Currently empanelled partners include Liberty General Insurance, Royal Sundaram General Insurance, and United India Insurance Company Ltd. Once you opt in and complete your booking, the insurer directly sends your policy document along with nominee registration details via SMS and email. IRCTC assumes no liability in the claims process.

What Is NOT Covered?

Like all accidental insurance policies, OTIS comes with exclusions passengers must know before assuming blanket protection:

🚫

Exclusions Under OTIS

Suicide or attempted suicide and self-inflicted injuries are not covered. Deaths or injuries from natural causes (heart attack, pre-existing illness) during the journey are excluded. Accidents at unmanned level crossings are routed to the Motor Vehicles Accident Tribunal, not the railway insurance system. Waitlisted ticket holders and children under five are not eligible. Tickets booked via international portals or agents outside IRCTC are excluded.

Before vs. After: What the Ruling Changes for Passengers

❌ Before the Ruling

  • Insurance only for IRCTC online/app tickets
  • Counter-ticket buyers completely excluded
  • Rural & offline passengers unprotected
  • No tech mandate for counters
  • Arbitrary class distinction upheld by Railways

✅ After the Ruling

  • All reserved-class passengers eligible
  • Counter-ticket opt-in mechanism mandated
  • Technology upgrade at PRS counters ordered
  • Equal coverage regardless of booking mode
  • Article 14 protection affirmed for travellers

The ₹0.45 Premium: India’s Most Affordable Insurance Policy

At 45 paise per journey, OTIS offers one of the best risk-transfer ratios of any financial product in India. For context: a ₹10 lakh term insurance policy for a 35-year-old costs roughly ₹10,000–₹15,000 per year. OTIS covers you for a single journey at one-twenty-thousandth of that cost. The base premium is ₹0.38 with ₹0.07 added as IGST — totalling 45 paise.

The Technology Challenge: How Will Railways Implement This?

The Court acknowledged the Railways’ implementation concern while dismissing it as a reason for denial. The path forward involves several technological upgrades that the Ministry of Railways must now fast-track before the April 1 hearing:

01

PRS Terminal Upgrade

Passenger Reservation System terminals at every booking counter need a software update to display the OTIS opt-in prompt and capture nominee mobile numbers.

02

Aadhaar / ID Verification

Counter passengers can be verified using the Aadhaar seeding already present in the PRS database, resolving the identity-misuse concern raised by the Railways.

03

SMS Policy Dispatch

Upon premium collection, the insurer must automatically dispatch the policy document and nominee registration link to the mobile number on the PNR.

04

Insurer API Integration

IRCTC’s insurer panel must integrate their APIs with the PRS backend to enable real-time policy issuance and tracking from non-digital points of sale.

🛠️

Precedent: Tatkal & Aadhaar

The Railways already mandates Aadhaar-linked identity verification for Tatkal tickets at counters — which processes millions of transactions per year without systematic misuse. The Court cited this as proof that the “identity problem” at counters is a solved challenge, not an ongoing barrier.

How to Claim Under OTIS — Step-by-Step

Whether the policy was opted for online or — once the ruling is implemented — at a counter, the claims process remains identical. Here is what passengers and nominees must do in the event of a covered incident:

1

Register Nominee Immediately

Upon receiving the policy SMS/email from the insurer, log in to their portal and register your nominee’s name, relationship, and bank account number without delay.

2

Intimate the Insurer Directly

Claims must be reported directly to the insurance company — not to IRCTC, which has no role post-policy issuance. Use the toll-free number on your policy document.

3

Gather Documentation

Key documents: original ticket/PNR copy, FIR or Railway Accident Report, medical records, death certificate (if applicable), disability certificate from a government doctor, and bank details.

4

File Within the Stipulated Period

Most insurer terms require intimation within 30 days of the accident. Delay beyond the specified period can result in claim rejection. Keep all photos and authority reports safely.

💡

Pro Tip: Update Nominee Before You Travel

The most common reason for claim delays is an unregistered or incorrect nominee. The policy is issued within minutes of booking — set aside 2 minutes during your wait at the platform to open the insurer’s link from your policy SMS and register your nominee before the train departs.

The Bigger Picture: What This Ruling Means for Passenger Rights

This is not merely an insurance story. It is a landmark moment in the evolution of statutory passenger rights in India. For decades, a quiet hierarchy existed on Indian Railways: the digitally enabled upper-middle class passenger booking from a smartphone enjoyed progressive, expanding benefits, while the counter-ticket buyer — often older, rural, or simply more comfortable with physical transactions — was systemically excluded from the same safety net.

The Supreme Court’s invocation of Article 14 sends a clear signal to all public-sector service providers: digital access cannot become the de facto qualifier for basic protections. Whether it is banking (Jan Dhan), social welfare (PM Kisan), or now passenger insurance, the principle is consistent — the method of access cannot create a two-tiered system of rights.

Legal experts note that this ruling could have downstream implications for other Railway benefits currently restricted to e-ticket holders — including certain meal pre-order facilities, loyalty points under the IRCTC Reward scheme, and access to digital grievance mechanisms. Advocacy groups are already discussing whether the same constitutional logic applies to these exclusions.

📊

India’s Travel Insurance Market Context

India’s travel insurance market is projected to reach USD 4.17 billion by 2031, growing at approximately 15.87% annually. Rail travel insurance, despite serving nearly 2 crore passengers daily, remains drastically under-penetrated — partly because of the counter-ticket exclusion this ruling now dismantles.

What Passengers Should Do Right Now

While implementation at counters will require a technology rollout — the next hearing is set for April 1, 2026 — online passengers can and should act immediately. Here is a practical checklist:

ActionWho It Applies ToPriority
Always tick the OTIS checkbox at IRCTC checkoutOnline ticket buyers🔴 High
Register nominee on insurer portal within 24 hrs of bookingAll opted-in passengers🔴 High
Save policy document and insurer helpline in your phoneAll opted-in passengers🟠 Medium
Ask at counters once April 2026 rollout beginsCounter-ticket buyers🟡 Upcoming
Note that ₹8L statutory cover exists separately — no action neededAll reserved-class passengers🟢 Automatic

Frequently Asked Questions

Is OTIS the same as the ₹8 lakh Railway accident compensation?
No. The ₹8 lakh is a statutory compensation payable by Indian Railways under the Railway Accidents and Untoward Incidents (Compensation) Rules, 2016 — it is automatic and requires no premium. OTIS is an optional, premium-based insurance product facilitated by IRCTC and underwritten by private/public sector insurers. The two are separate and can both be claimed in the event of a covered accident, potentially yielding up to ₹18 lakh in total.
When will counter-ticket buyers actually get access to OTIS?
The Supreme Court has scheduled the next hearing for April 1, 2026, at which point the Ministry of Railways is expected to present its implementation roadmap. The Court’s March 12 direction was an observation and directive, not yet a time-bound executable order — so the rollout timeline will become clearer after the April hearing.
Does OTIS cover accidents at unmanned railway level crossings?
No. Accidents at unmanned level crossings are specifically excluded from both OTIS and the Railway statutory compensation framework. Such cases are directed to the Motor Vehicle Accident Tribunal, which determines compensation based on the merits of each case separately.
Can a passenger on a waitlisted ticket opt for OTIS?
No. OTIS is currently available only to passengers with confirmed or RAC (Reservation Against Cancellation) tickets. Waitlisted passengers, children under five years of age, and tickets booked through international portals are all excluded from OTIS eligibility regardless of booking mode.
What if I did not register my nominee after booking?
You can still register your nominee by visiting the insurer’s portal using the link in the policy confirmation email or SMS you received at the time of booking. This step is critical — without a registered nominee, claims in the event of death may face significant processing delays and require additional documentation such as legal heir certificates.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute financial, legal, or insurance advice. All coverage details, claim procedures, and policy terms are subject to the specific policy document issued by the empanelled insurer at the time of your ticket booking. Always refer to your individual policy document and consult a licensed insurance advisor for personalised guidance. Sources: Supreme Court of India (March 12, 2026 order), IRCTC Optional Travel Insurance Scheme terms, Railway Accidents and Untoward Incidents (Compensation) Rules 2016, IRDAI regulations.