NCB in Car Insurance 2026: Ultimate Guide to Save & Maximize Discounts
Car Insurance · 2026 Guide

NCB in Car Insurance: The Ultimate 2026 Guide to Save & Maximize Discounts

Understand your No Claim Bonus, unlock up to 50% off your premium, and learn how to transfer it the smart way — explained simply.

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Every year at renewal, thousands of Indian car owners quietly lose money. Not because their premium went up — but because they didn't understand NCB in Car Insurance. A single small claim, a missed renewal window, or a wrong transfer at the time of selling the car can wipe out a discount that took five years to build.

NCB is one of the most powerful levers you have to cut your motor insurance cost. Used right, it can shave up to half your own-damage premium. Ignored, it silently inflates what you pay for years.

This guide breaks down everything — the full form, the official discount slabs, the calculation formula, the transfer process, and the mistakes that quietly cost drivers thousands every renewal cycle.

NCB in Car Insurance premium savings illustration with car and calculator
NCB in Car Insurance can reduce your own-damage premium by up to 50% over five claim-free years.

What is NCB in Car Insurance?

NCB stands for No Claim Bonus. It is a reward discount offered by insurers to policyholders who do not file any claim during the policy year. The discount is applied on the own-damage (OD) component of your car insurance premium at the time of renewal.

Put simply: if you drive safely and don't claim for a year, the insurer says thank you by offering you a percentage off next year's OD premium. The longer your claim-free streak, the bigger the discount — up to a maximum of 50%.

Quick definition: NCB in Car Insurance is a renewal discount (20% to 50%) granted on the own-damage premium for every consecutive claim-free policy year. It belongs to the policyholder, not the car.

Key facts about NCB

  • Applies only to the own-damage portion, not the third-party premium.
  • Regulated by IRDAI with standardized slabs across all insurers in India.
  • Belongs to the owner — you keep it even when you sell your car and buy a new one.
  • Must be renewed within 90 days of expiry, otherwise the NCB lapses.
  • Not available on standalone third-party policies.

NCB Discount Slabs 2026: Year vs Discount %

The NCB structure in India is standardized by IRDAI. Here is the official slab you should know before your next renewal.

Consecutive Claim-Free Years NCB Discount on OD Premium Typical Savings Example*
After 1 claim-free year20%₹2,000 off ₹10,000 OD
After 2 consecutive claim-free years25%₹2,500 off ₹10,000 OD
After 3 consecutive claim-free years35%₹3,500 off ₹10,000 OD
After 4 consecutive claim-free years45%₹4,500 off ₹10,000 OD
After 5 consecutive claim-free years50%₹5,000 off ₹10,000 OD

*Illustrative only. Actual savings depend on your car's IDV, location, age, and insurer pricing.

NCB in Car Insurance discount slab chart showing 20 to 50 percent savings
NCB in Car Insurance grows yearly — from 20% in year one to a capped 50% from year five onward.

Important: 50% is the maximum NCB in India. Even if you stay claim-free for 10 years, the discount does not go above 50%.

How NCB in Car Insurance Is Calculated

The math is simple once you separate OD and TP premium. NCB applies only to the OD portion.

The formula

NCB Discount Amount = Own-Damage Premium × Applicable NCB %

Payable OD Premium = OD Premium − NCB Discount

Worked example

Assume Rohan owns a 2022 Hyundai Creta. His renewal quote shows:

  • Own-Damage premium: ₹12,000
  • Third-Party premium: ₹7,890
  • Claim-free years: 3
  • Applicable NCB: 35%

Calculation:

  • NCB Discount = 12,000 × 35% = ₹4,200
  • Net OD Premium = 12,000 − 4,200 = ₹7,800
  • Total Premium = 7,800 + 7,890 = ₹15,690

Without NCB, Rohan would have paid ₹19,890. He saved ₹4,200 simply by staying claim-free.

What NCB does NOT reduce

  • Third-party premium (fixed by IRDAI).
  • GST component.
  • Premium for add-ons like zero depreciation, engine protect, or RSA.

How to Transfer NCB in Car Insurance

NCB is attached to you — the policyholder — not to your car. This means you can carry it forward when you sell your old car and buy a new one, or when you switch insurers. Here is the clean process.

When you sell your car and buy a new one

  1. Cancel the existing policy attached to the old car, or transfer it to the buyer.
  2. Request an NCB Retention Certificate from your current insurer.
  3. Use this certificate when you buy your new car's policy — the discount gets applied to the new OD premium.
  4. The certificate is typically valid for up to 3 years from issuance.

When you switch insurers (same car)

  1. Note your current NCB% from the policy document.
  2. Get a quote from the new insurer and mention your NCB.
  3. Submit the previous year's policy copy as proof.
  4. The new insurer applies the same NCB on your OD premium.

Documents you'll need

  • Previous policy copy.
  • NCB Retention Certificate (if transferring to a new car).
  • Sale proof of old vehicle (Form 29 & 30) if applicable.
  • New vehicle RC (for new-car transfer).

Need step-by-step help? Read our detailed NCB Transfer Guide for the exact paperwork, timelines, and common rejection reasons.

NCB Protector Add-On: Is It Worth It?

One claim — even a small one — can reset your 50% NCB back to zero. That's where an NCB Protector add-on earns its keep. For a small extra premium, it preserves your NCB even after a limited number of claims during the policy year.

When it makes sense

  • You already have 35% or higher NCB and don't want to lose it to a minor claim.
  • You drive in high-density traffic or accident-prone zones.
  • You have a high-IDV car where OD premium is significant.
  • You're risk-averse and value premium stability over saving a few hundred rupees.

When to skip it

  • You have less than 20% NCB — not much to protect yet.
  • Your car is older with low IDV (savings are marginal).
  • You're a low-mileage driver with a strong claim-free record.

Deep dive available: Learn exactly how the add-on works, its conditions, and its cost in our NCB Protector Add-On Guide.

When You Lose NCB in Car Insurance

NCB is generous, but unforgiving. These are the scenarios where drivers quietly lose it — often without realizing.

1. You filed a claim during the policy year

Any approved own-damage claim resets NCB to zero at the next renewal (unless you have the NCB Protector add-on active).

2. You didn't renew within 90 days of expiry

IRDAI allows a 90-day grace window post-expiry to renew and retain NCB. Miss this window, and your NCB lapses fully.

3. You forgot to collect the NCB Retention Certificate when selling

If you sell your car and transfer the policy to the new owner without retaining your NCB, it goes with the policy, not with you.

4. Common mistakes that cost drivers

  • Filing a small ₹2,000 scratch claim and losing a ₹4,500 NCB benefit.
  • Letting the policy expire because of a travel trip or oversight.
  • Buying a new car policy without mentioning the carryover NCB.
  • Not updating address/phone with insurer — missing renewal reminders.

Pro Tips to Maximize Your NCB

NCB in Car Insurance pro tips to maximize no claim bonus savings
Smart claim decisions are the single biggest driver of long-term NCB savings.

1. Use the "pay out of pocket" rule

Before filing, compare the claim cost with the NCB discount you'd lose. If a ₹3,000 dent claim costs you a ₹5,000 NCB next year, paying from your pocket saves more.

2. Renew early — never touch the 90-day cliff

Set a calendar reminder 30 days before expiry. Early renewal avoids last-minute hassles and preserves NCB with zero risk.

3. Buy the NCB Protector add-on after 35% NCB

It becomes mathematically attractive once your NCB is high enough to matter. Below 25%, skip it.

4. Always ask for the NCB Retention Certificate when selling

The moment you decide to sell, request the certificate from your insurer. It's free and valid for up to 3 years.

5. Don't split vehicles across insurers randomly

When transferring across insurers, the policy continuity must be clean. Gaps of more than 90 days reset everything.

6. Keep soft copies of every renewal

A lost policy document can delay NCB proof and cost you the discount on the next renewal.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the full form of NCB in car insurance?

NCB stands for No Claim Bonus. It's a renewal discount offered by insurers on the own-damage premium for every consecutive claim-free year, ranging from 20% to a maximum of 50%.

What is the maximum NCB in car insurance in India?

The maximum NCB in Car Insurance is 50%, achieved after 5 consecutive claim-free years. It stays capped at 50% even if you continue without claims beyond that.

Does NCB apply to third-party car insurance?

No. NCB in Car Insurance applies only to the own-damage (OD) premium. Third-party premiums are fixed by IRDAI and are not discounted under NCB.

Can I transfer my NCB to a new car?

Yes. NCB belongs to you, not the vehicle. Request an NCB Retention Certificate from your current insurer and present it when insuring your new car. The certificate is typically valid for up to 3 years.

Does NCB carry over if I change my insurer?

Yes. You can switch insurers and retain your NCB. Share your previous year's policy as proof, and the new insurer will apply the same NCB percentage on your OD premium.

Will I lose NCB if I file a small claim?

Yes — unless you have the NCB Protector add-on. Any own-damage claim (big or small) resets NCB to zero at the next renewal. That's why comparing claim size with NCB value before filing is critical.

How long is the NCB grace period after policy expiry?

You have a 90-day grace window post-expiry to renew and retain NCB. Beyond 90 days, the NCB lapses completely.

Is NCB Protector add-on worth buying?

It's worth it when your NCB is 35% or higher, or if you drive in accident-prone areas. Below 25% NCB, the add-on premium often outweighs the benefit.

Check Your NCB. Renew Smarter with Aero Insurance.

Find out your exact NCB eligibility, compare renewal quotes across top insurers, and lock in your 2026 discount — all in under 2 minutes.

Check NCB & Get Quote

Helpful References

For official guidelines on motor insurance and consumer rights, you can refer to:

For more insurance learning, explore our Aero Insurance Knowledge Hub.

Disclaimer: The information on this website is provided for general informational purposes only as a service to the broader internet community. It does not constitute insurance or financial advice, and we do not guarantee the accuracy, adequacy, or completeness of the content. Aero Broking and Consulting Services Private Limited works with POSP Agents and licensed insurance intermediaries. Product benefits, NCB slabs, add-ons and premium calculations are governed by IRDAI regulations and the terms & conditions of the respective insurer's policy wordings. Please read the policy document carefully before concluding a sale. Insurance is the subject matter of solicitation.
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