Ask any insurance agent "How much health cover should I have?" and you'll get "₹25 lakh, sir, full family." Ask them "Should I buy ₹25L as one policy or as ₹5L + ₹20L top-up?" - watch them squirm. The second option pays them less commission.
Here's the math they don't want you to do.
The setup: ₹25L cover, two ways
You're 35, your spouse is 32, you have one 5-year-old child. You want ₹25L of hospitalisation cover for the family. Two options:
- Option A: One big family floater policy - ₹25L sum insured.
- Option B: Base policy ₹5L + Super top-up ₹20L with ₹5L deductible.
Both give you identical cover. If you get a ₹22L cancer bill, both pay the same ₹22L. The only difference is how the claim is structured internally - and how much you pay for this protection.
Real-world premium comparison (2026 rates)
| Structure | Premium (per year) | Effective cover | vs Single |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single ₹25L floater | ₹28,500 | ₹25L | Baseline |
| ₹5L base + ₹20L top-up (₹5L deductible) | ₹15,900 | ₹25L | 44% cheaper |
| ₹10L base + ₹15L top-up (₹10L deductible) | ₹18,400 | ₹25L | 35% cheaper |
| ₹3L base + ₹25L top-up (₹3L deductible) | ₹13,800 | ₹28L effective | 52% cheaper |
Rates are indicative - based on HDFC ERGO Optima Secure + HDFC ERGO my:health Medisure Super Top Up for a 35-year-old non-smoker in Mumbai, family floater. Your rates will vary by insurer and profile.
The savings aren't trivial. Over 30 years, you keep ₹3.8–4.5 lakh. Invested at 10%, that's ₹12–15 lakh in retirement - from one structural choice.
How deductibles actually work (and the one gotcha)
A super top-up with ₹5L deductible means: in any policy year, the top-up pays only after you've already crossed ₹5L in claims - either from one big claim or multiple smaller ones.
This is the "super" in super top-up. A plain top-up requires one single claim to cross the deductible, which is much stricter. Always buy super top-up, never plain top-up.
The one gotcha: if your base policy claim settles in March and a new condition lands you in hospital in April (new policy year), you need to cross ₹5L again for the top-up to trigger. Keep your policy renewal dates aligned.
When a single policy is still better
Top-up isn't always the right answer. Single policy wins in these specific situations:
- You want the same insurer for everything. Some people value one call, one app, one helpline. Valid preference, though it costs 30–40%.
- You have a chronic condition that frequently triggers ₹2–4L claims. You might exhaust the base every year and never cross the deductible. But in this case, you should anyway be buying a higher base (₹10–15L), not the same ₹5L.
- You're above 65 and buying fresh. Some top-ups have age limits and require the base to be from the same insurer. Options shrink.
- The difference is under ₹5K. Sometimes for low sum insureds the saving is small enough that simplicity wins.
The action plan
- Pick a base of ₹5–10L from a proven insurer (Star, Care, Niva Bupa, HDFC Ergo, ICICI Lombard). Check claim settlement ratio > 95%, complaint ratio low.
- Add super top-up of ₹15–25L with deductible matching your base. Can be same insurer or different - price-compare.
- Always declare pre-existing conditions on both forms. Non-disclosure is the #1 reason for claim rejection.
- Review every 3 years - medical inflation is 12% annually. What's enough today isn't enough in 2029.
- Don't touch employer health cover as your only cover. It disappears with the job.
Structural smart beats flashy. A ₹5L + ₹20L top-up will save you ₹12,600 every single year and protect you exactly the same as a ₹25L single policy. Do the boring thing. Invest the difference.