Always declare tobacco/smoking habits honestly-even “occasional.” In term insurance, wrong smoker/non-smoker declaration is a common reason for claim disputes. Medical tests are normal and usually help price the policy correctly. The goal is not the cheapest premium; it’s a clean claim for your family.
Back to: Term Insurance guide
Quick checklist (do this before you apply)
| Item | What to do |
|---|---|
| Tobacco use | Declare cigarettes, vaping, chewing tobacco, gutkha, etc. |
| Alcohol | Answer exactly as asked |
| Past conditions | Disclose diagnoses, meds, surgeries, tests |
| Medicals | Do insurer medicals when asked; keep reports |
| Consistency | Ensure proposal answers match medical records |
What counts as “smoker”?
Insurers typically consider you a smoker/tobacco user if you use:
- Cigarettes/cigars
- Chewing tobacco/gutkha
- Nicotine products (depends on insurer)
If you’re unsure, disclose and clarify in writing.
Why this matters for claims
During claim settlement, insurers may:
- Review proposal form
- Review medical records
- Seek doctor opinions
Mismatch can lead to delays, investigations, or repudiation.
Medical tests: what to expect
Common medicals include:
- Blood tests
- Urine tests
- ECG
- Vitals and doctor exam
Treat medicals as protection: they reduce future disputes.
Related articles (internal links)
- Pillar: Term Insurance in India guide
- Cross-cluster: PED disclosure in health insurance
FAQs
Do occasional smokers get caught?
Claims investigations can compare declarations with medical history. Don’t risk it.
Are medical tests mandatory?
Often for higher cover/age. Requirements vary.
Can I refuse medicals?
You can, but insurer may decline or offer different terms.
Does being a smoker always mean very high premium?
Premiums usually increase, but it’s better than claim risk.
Can medical tests reveal issues that reject my proposal?
Yes, but that’s part of underwriting. Better to know and plan than face claim problems later.
Do I need to submit old medical reports?
If asked, yes. Even if not asked, disclose conditions.
What is the biggest application mistake?
Treating the proposal like a “formality” and under-disclosing.
Disclaimer: Educational content. Underwriting definitions vary across insurers.
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