Does cyber insurance cover ransomware attacks?

Does cyber insurance cover ransomware? Learn what’s covered, what’s not, exclusions, costs, and how Indian businesses should choose the right policy.

Quick Summary

Ransomware is now one of the most financially damaging cyber threats facing Indian businesses. While most cyber insurance policies cover ransomware-related losses under cyber extortion and incident response clauses, coverage is conditional. Claims can be denied due to poor security controls, unpatched systems, or illegal ransom payments. This blog explains how ransomware works, what cyber insurance covers and excludes, how much coverage you need, and how businesses can ensure their policy responds when an attack occurs.

Book a Demo

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the main cyber threats businesses face in India?

accordion icon

The top cyber threats include ransomware, phishing attacks, data breaches, insider threats, and AI-driven scams, all of which can disrupt operations and compromise sensitive data.

What is the typical coverage limit of a cyber insurance policy?

accordion icon

Cyber insurance limits vary by business type, ranging from ₹2-10 crore for startups and SaaS firms, ₹5–20 crore for healthcare and HR tech, to ₹10–50 crore for fintech and data-heavy enterprises.

What does cyber insurance cover during a ransomware attack?

accordion icon

Most policies cover ransom payments (legally allowed), incident response and forensics, data restoration, business interruption, legal expenses, and reputational management.

What is not covered under a cyber insurance policy?

accordion icon

Exclusions include poor cybersecurity hygiene, unpatched or outdated systems, insider attacks, intentional negligence, war or state-sponsored attacks, illegal ransom payments, and pre-existing breaches.

How can businesses ensure their cyber insurance protects against ransomware?

accordion icon

Businesses should check for explicit ransomware coverage, adequate ransom sub-limits, inclusion of incident response, business interruption coverage, alignment with DPDP Act exposure, and regular risk assessments.

A graphic showing a woman sitting on a chair with a laptop