A doctor lost Rs. 24 lakh from a bank locker. RBI caps bank liability at 100x rent. What actually protects your gold and documents? A practical 7-layer guide.
We already established this in an earlier article on this blog (Is Your Bank Locker Really Safe? What RBI Rules Actually Say). A bank locker is not the all-risk-covered vault that most Indian families believe it to be. The Bengaluru doctor who lost Rs. 24 lakh worth of gold jewellery from a nationalised bank locker — with CCTV footage confirming she had deposited it — is proof that even the most trusted institutions can fail you. The Delhi case of Rs. 60 lakh in jewellery going missing from a Punjab National Bank locker drives the point home further.
The RBI guidelines are unambiguous: bank liability is capped at 100 times the annual locker rent. If your locker rent is Rs. 7,000 a year, the bank owes you at most Rs. 7 lakh — regardless of whether you stored Rs. 7 lakh or Rs. 70 lakh inside. Banks are also completely off the hook for losses from natural disasters. This is the law. It will not change overnight.
So the logical question that follows is: If a bank locker is not enough, how do I actually protect my gold, jewellery, important documents, and other valuables?
That is exactly what this article addresses. Not in theory — but in a structured, practical way that an ordinary Indian household can act on today.
The goal is not to abandon the bank locker entirely. The goal is to build a multi-layered protection strategy so that no single failure — whether a bank’s negligence, a home burglary, a fire, or a flood — can wipe out your financial legacy.
If there is one financial product that Indians consistently ignore despite owning enormous amounts of gold, it is jewellery insurance. India holds an estimated 25,000 tonnes of gold — more than any other country — and yet jewellery insurance penetration remains negligibly low. Most people have never even heard of it as a standalone product.
What Is Jewellery Insurance?
Jewellery insurance is a specialised type of property insurance that provides financial coverage against the loss, theft, burglary, accidental damage, or destruction of gold and other precious ornaments. It can be purchased in two ways:
Both routes work. The choice depends on the volume and value of jewellery you own, your existing insurance portfolio, and the premium you are comfortable with.
What Does Jewellery Insurance Cover?
A comprehensive jewellery insurance policy in India typically covers:
This last point deserves emphasis. Unlike the bank’s liability which is capped, a jewellery insurance policy can cover the actual declared value of your ornaments — provided you have disclosed them correctly and paid the appropriate premium.
What Is Not Covered? The Exclusions You Must Know
No insurance product is perfect. Jewellery insurance policies in India typically exclude:
Critical Rule: Only items that are explicitly listed and declared in the policy are covered. If you buy a new necklace and do not update your policy schedule, it is not insured. Review and update your jewellery insurance every year.
How Is the Premium Calculated?
The premium for jewellery insurance in India is generally a small percentage of the total insured value — typically between 0.3% and 1% per annum depending on the insurer, coverage type, and items included. For example, if you insure jewellery worth Rs. 10 lakh, you might pay anywhere between Rs. 3,000 to Rs. 10,000 as annual premium. For most families, this is a remarkably small cost relative to the protection it provides.
Key factors that affect premium include the total declared value, the type of coverage (all-risk vs named perils), location of storage (home vs bank locker vs worn), and whether transit cover is included.
Which Insurers Offer Jewellery Insurance in India?
Several reputed general insurance companies offer jewellery coverage in India. The major players include HDFC ERGO, Bajaj Allianz, IFFCO Tokio, New India Assurance, and SBI General Insurance. You can also compare policies on aggregator platforms like PolicyBazaar or BankBazaar. Before you buy, always read the policy document carefully — not just the brochure — and check the claim settlement ratio of the insurer.
How to Make a Claim
If something happens to your insured jewellery, act immediately:
Insurance only works if it is accurate. And accuracy in jewellery insurance starts with a proper valuation certificate. Yet most people simply guess the value of their gold or rely on the original purchase price — which may be years or even decades old.
Gold prices have risen sharply over the years. Jewellery bought 10 years ago at Rs. 2,500 per gram is worth several times more today. If you insure your jewellery at its 10-year-old value, you will be dramatically underinsured, and any claim will be settled for far less than the actual replacement cost.
What Is a Valuation Certificate?
A valuation certificate is a formal document issued by a certified jeweller or an approved government valuer that states the current market value of each piece of jewellery. It includes a description of the item (metal, purity, weight, stones), a photograph, and the assessed value at the date of valuation.
Most insurers require a valuation certificate for each item above a threshold value — typically Rs. 25,000 to Rs. 50,000 per piece. For high-value heirloom jewellery, the insurer may appoint their own independent valuer.
How Often Should You Get Jewellery Revalued?
At a minimum, get your jewellery revalued every two to three years. Given the trajectory of gold prices in India, annual revaluation is increasingly advisable. Each time you revalue, update your insurance policy to reflect the revised figure. An outdated insured value is as dangerous as no insurance at all.
Practical Tip: When getting jewellery revalued, also take high-resolution photographs of every piece — front and back. Store these photographs on your phone, email them to yourself, and save them on DigiLocker. These images are your strongest evidence in a theft or loss claim.
A home safe is not a replacement for a bank locker or insurance. It is a complementary layer of protection for valuables that you access regularly — jewellery you wear on occasion, some emergency cash, a spare set of keys, or documents you need to access quickly.
The idea of owning a home safe used to feel like something only wealthy people needed. That perception has changed. A decent home safe in India — from reputed brands like Godrej, Yale, or Ozone — now costs between Rs. 5,000 and Rs. 25,000 depending on size and features. This is a one-time purchase that pays for itself the first time it prevents a loss.
What to Look for in a Home Safe
What should you keep in a home safe? A reasonable approach is: jewellery you wear regularly, moderate emergency cash (not your life savings), spare copies of important documents, hard drives with digital backups, and items you need to access without a trip to the bank. Do not keep the bulk of your high-value jewellery in a home safe indefinitely — that is what insurance and the bank locker in combination are for.
Where Should the Home Safe Be Installed?
The location matters more than most people realise. A safe left in a bedroom wardrobe is the first place a professional thief will look. The best practices are to bolt it to a wall or floor inside a built-in wardrobe or cabinet, or better still, have it installed in a room that is not easily identifiable as a storage room. Some people have safes fitted inside false walls or under flooring — but for most households, a securely bolted wardrobe installation is perfectly adequate.
We are a document-heavy country. Property deeds, inheritance documents, wills, partnership deeds, insurance policies, share certificates, birth and death certificates, educational qualifications — Indian families accumulate enormous volumes of critical paperwork over generations. Losing any of these — whether in a flood, a fire, a burglary, or through the failure of a bank locker — can set off years of legal pain.
DigiLocker is the Government of India’s initiative under the Digital India programme. It is a free, cloud-based repository linked to your Aadhaar number where you can store and access digitally signed documents. Critically, documents issued directly by government agencies through DigiLocker — such as your driving licence, vehicle registration, PAN card, academic certificates, and more — carry full legal validity under the Information Technology Act.
What DigiLocker Can and Cannot Do
What it can do:
What it cannot do:
Practical Tip: Use DigiLocker primarily for government-issued documents — driving licence, vehicle RC, PAN, Aadhaar, academic records. For property documents and wills, create certified copies from the sub-registrar, scan them, and store the scans in DigiLocker as a reference backup. Always retain the originals.
How to Set Up DigiLocker
Go to digilocker.gov.in or download the app. Register using your mobile number and Aadhaar. Once set up, many documents are automatically pulled from the issuing government agency. Enable two-factor authentication. Share login credentials with at least one trusted family member — because in a genuine emergency, your family should be able to access these records if you cannot.
Original property documents deserve special attention because their loss creates problems that insurance and DigiLocker cannot fully solve. A jewellery claim can be settled in cash. A lost property deed creates title uncertainty that can block property sales, mortgages, and inheritance for years.
What You Should Do With Original Property Documents
Most people in India who have insurance have life insurance. A far smaller number have health insurance. Almost nobody has home insurance — specifically, comprehensive home insurance with contents coverage.
A contents cover under home insurance protects the moveable possessions inside your home against a defined list of risks. This includes furniture, electronics, and importantly — jewellery and valuables up to the declared sub-limit. Some policies allow you to enhance this sub-limit for jewellery by paying an additional premium.
If you already own home insurance, check your policy right now. Look for the jewellery sub-limit. It is likely far lower than the actual value of gold in your home. Most standard home insurance policies in India have a jewellery sub-limit of Rs. 1 lakh to Rs. 2 lakh — which is completely inadequate for a typical Indian household. You need to either top up this cover or take a separate jewellery insurance policy.
Key Things to Check in Your Home Insurance Policy
Insurance is only as good as the evidence you can produce. In India, claims are frequently delayed or rejected not because the insurer is dishonest, but because the claimant cannot produce adequate documentation. This is entirely avoidable.
Build Your Valuables Record Today
Set aside two hours this weekend. Go through every piece of jewellery in your home and in your bank locker. For each piece:
Store this record in a spreadsheet. Attach photos. Email it to yourself and to a trusted family member. Save it on DigiLocker. Update it every time you buy new jewellery or move pieces between locations.
This documentation serves three purposes: it helps you get a precise insurance valuation, it supports an insurance claim in case of loss, and it helps police investigations in the event of a theft.
Let us be practical about this. Even with insurance and all other protections in place, incidents happen. Here is what to do if you discover a loss:
If Jewellery Goes Missing From Your Bank Locker
If Jewellery Is Stolen From Your Home
Putting It All Together: Your Complete Valuables Protection Framework
No single layer is sufficient on its own. The power of this framework lies in having multiple layers working together. Here is a summary:
Layer 1 — Jewellery Insurance: Covers the actual value of your gold beyond the bank’s 100x cap limit Layer 2 — Valuation Certificate: Ensures your insurance amount matches current market value Layer 3 — Home Safe: Protects frequently used jewellery and emergency cash at home Layer 4 — DigiLocker: Secures government-issued documents digitally with legal validity Layer 5 — Document Strategy: Multiple certified copies of property papers stored in separate locations Layer 6 — Home Insurance with Contents Cover: Umbrella protection for household valuables Layer 7 — Documentation Habits: Photos, bills, and records that make claims successful
The Bengaluru doctor’s case was not a freak accident. It was a reminder. Nationalized banks, private banks, co-operative banks — none of them are infallible. The RBI has designed guidelines that limit bank liability precisely because regulators understand that banks cannot be held responsible for every eventuality.
The responsibility of protecting your financial legacy rests with you. A bank locker is one tool. Insurance is another. A home safe is another. DigiLocker is another. Disciplined documentation is another. None of these alone is enough. Together, they create a system of protection that is genuinely robust.
The cost of this entire framework — a jewellery insurance policy, one home safe, a DigiLocker account (which is free), and a few hours of documentation — is a fraction of what most families spend on a single piece of jewellery. The peace of mind it provides is incalculable.
Do not wait for something to go wrong. Build your protection framework today. The only cost is your time and a small annual insurance premium. The alternative — discovering too late that a bank locker, a theft, or a fire has wiped out what took a lifetime to accumulate — is a cost no one should pay.
EPF Scheme 2026 explained fully: EPF withdrawal, EPS pension, and EDLI insurance changes with examples,…
Chasing financial freedom? Do health, time, relationships and contentment matter just as much? Sadly, we…
Your "safe" SIPs, SGBs, PPF, or Index Funds are secretly sabotaging your wealth. Peltzman Effect…
Thinking your retirement plan is foolproof? Why LUCK - not asset or fund selection or…
Nifty 50 Index Funds Vs Active Large Cap Funds — Can we really compare them…
Should you pick Nifty 500 Multicap 50:25:25, Nifty 500, or Nifty LargeMidcap 250 Index Fund?…
View Comments
Excellent article sir.
Did not know about gold insurance.
Shared it with family and friends.
Dear Upendra,
Thanks. Yes, the products are mentioned in the above post.
Hello Mr. Basu,
Today I received your post “Your Bank Locker Is NOT Safe: What Actually Protects Your Gold and on March 21, 2026, you had sent another post “Is Your Bank Locker Really Safe? What RBI Rules Actually Says”.
I just need to know as to what the difference between above both the articles?
Please enlighten.
Thanks.
RAVINDRA KUMAR BHUWALKA
Dear Ravindra,
The first article is about Bank locker rules and regualtions and explaining about how much is covered in case of any bad events. In second article, it is more about how we can protect our valuables beyond bank locker.
UNDERSTOOD
THANKS
RAVINRA KUMAR BHUWALKA