Agriculture in India is fundamentally an act of faith — faith placed not in markets or contracts but in monsoons, soil, and seasons that answer to no guarantee. A farmer who borrows against the next harvest, invests in seeds, fertilisers, and irrigation, and commits months of labour to a crop standing in the field has staked everything on variables entirely beyond their control. When a cyclone flattens a standing crop the night before harvest, when unseasonal hailstorms shred weeks of growth in minutes, when a prolonged dry spell during the flowering stage quietly destroys an entire season’s yield potential — the loss is not just financial. For smallholder farming families who live at the intersection of debt and subsistence, a single crop failure can collapse the household economy, trigger distress migration, and in the most tragic cases, contribute to the agrarian crisis that has claimed too many lives across India’s farming communities.
The Pradhan Mantri Fasal Bima Yojana (PMFBY), launched on 13 January 2016 by the Government of India under the Ministry of Agriculture and Farmers’ Welfare, was designed as India’s most comprehensive, financially accessible, and technologically enabled agricultural risk management instrument — a crop insurance programme that places a meaningful financial safety net between the farming family and the catastrophic consequences of crop failure, at premium rates so affordable that even the most economically marginal cultivator can participate without strain.
The Strategic Shift PMFBY Represents
Before PMFBY, India had successive crop insurance schemes — the Comprehensive Crop Insurance Scheme of 1985, the National Agricultural Insurance Scheme of 1999, and the Modified National Agricultural Insurance Scheme. Each had limitations that reduced their effectiveness: high premium rates that discouraged voluntary participation, complex claim settlement procedures that delayed compensation by months or years, poor coverage of localised risks, and administrative friction that left large numbers of affected farmers without payouts even when their crops were clearly damaged.
PMFBY addressed these structural failures through three core innovations: uniformly low premium rates capped at historically low levels, a one-season, one-premium simplicity that replaced complex tiered structures, and a technology-first claim assessment architecture using remote sensing, satellite imagery, drones, and smartphone-based crop cutting experiments to accelerate and objectivise loss assessment — reducing human subjectivity and administrative delay from the compensation process.
Premium Structure: The Most Farmer-Friendly Insurance Rates in India
The defining financial feature of PMFBY is its government-subsidised premium structure, which caps the farmer’s premium contribution at levels that bear no relationship to actuarial risk — the difference between the farmer’s premium and the full actuarial premium being absorbed by the central and state governments:
| Crop Season and Type | Maximum Farmer Premium Rate | Government Subsidy on Premium |
|---|---|---|
| Kharif Crops (Paddy, Maize, Bajra, Cotton, etc.) | 2% of Sum Insured | Central and State share the difference in the from actuarial premium |
| Rabi Crops (Wheat, Barley, Mustard, Gram, etc.) | 1.5% of Sum Insured | Central and State share the difference in the from actuarial premium |
| Annual Commercial and Horticultural Crops | 5% of Sum Insured | Central and State share the difference in the from actuarial premium |
| North-Eastern States — Government Premium Share | 90% borne by the Central Government | Only 10% state contribution required |
The premium subsidy framework means a wheat farmer insuring a crop with a sum insured of ₹50,000 pays a maximum premium of ₹750 — less than two rupees per day — for comprehensive risk coverage that protects against virtually every weather-related agricultural risk. This premium affordability was a deliberate policy choice to make PMFBY a genuine mass-participation insurance programme rather than a selective scheme serving only those with the financial capacity to bear conventional insurance costs.
Comprehensive Risk Coverage: What PMFBY Insures
PMFBY’s coverage design is notably broad — it addresses not just the headline risk of total crop loss but a spectrum of agricultural risks that occur across different stages of the crop lifecycle:
| Risk Category | Coverage Details |
|---|---|
| Prevented Sowing or Planting Risk | Compensation when widespread rainfall failure or adverse conditions prevent sowing entirely |
| Standing Crop Loss (Comprehensive) | Coverage against drought, flood, inundation, pests, diseases, landslides, hailstorms, cyclones, typhoons, fire from natural causes |
| Post-Harvest Losses | Coverage for hailstorm, landslide, and inundation affecting individual farms within a notified area, even when widespread area-level loss is below threshold |
| Localised Calamities | Coverage for hailstorm, landslide, and inundation affecting individual farms within a notified area, even when widespread area-level loss is below the threshold |
| Wild Animal Attack | Several states have added wild animal attack as a covered risk — critical for farming communities near forest boundaries |
| Mid-Season Adversity | Compensation for anticipated yield loss of 50% or more due to adverse weather during the crop season |
The post-harvest loss coverage for up to 14 days addresses a chronically underserved risk — the situation where a farmer who has successfully grown and harvested their crop loses it to unseasonal rain or cyclone while it is spread out in the field to dry before threshing or sale. This was a gap in all previous Indian crop insurance schemes that PMFBY specifically closed.
Sum Insured: How Coverage Amounts Are Determined
The sum insured for each crop under PMFBY is calculated based on the Scale of Finance — the per-hectare credit limit set by the District Level Technical Committee — which is then used as the proxy for the cost of cultivation per hectare. This approach ensures that the sum insured reflects the actual financial investment the farmer has made in growing the crop rather than an arbitrary administrative figure:
| Determination Parameter | Details |
|---|---|
| Basis of Sum Insured | Scale of Finance per hectare as set by the District Level Technical Committee |
| Minimum Sum Insured | At least equivalent to the crop loan amount for loanee farmers |
| Sum Insured for Non-Loanee Farmers | Same as loanee farmers for the same crop and area |
| Maximum Sum Insured | No upper cap — based on the Scale of Finance for the specific crop and district |
| Annual Revision | The scale of Finance is revised periodically to reflect actual input cost inflation |
Critically, PMFBY mandates that non-loanee farmers receive the same sum insured as loanee farmers for the same crop in the same area — preventing the creation of a two-tier system where farmers who do not access crop loans receive inferior coverage.
Loanee and Non-Loanee Farmer Participation
PMFBY operates differently for farmers who have taken crop loans and those who have not:
Loanee Farmers — those who have borrowed from banks under Kisan Credit Card or other agricultural loan products — were originally enrolled in PMFBY on a compulsory basis, with the premium automatically deducted from their loan account. A 2020 policy revision made PMFBY voluntary for loanee farmers as well, allowing farmers who prefer not to enrol to opt out by submitting a declaration to their lending institution before the scheme’s cutoff date.
Non-Loanee Farmers — including tenant farmers, sharecroppers, and owner-cultivators who do not access formal credit — can enrol voluntarily through Common Service Centres (CSCs), bank branches, insurance company offices, and the PMFBY online portal. The voluntary enrolment window allows non-loanee farmers to self-select into the scheme and pay their premium directly.
The inclusion of tenant farmers and sharecroppers as eligible beneficiaries is one of PMFBY’s most socially progressive design features — acknowledging that the individuals bearing the actual risk of crop cultivation are often not the landowners but the tenants and sharecroppers who farm the land under informal arrangements and whose losses are equally real when crops fail.
Technology in Claim Settlement: Speed and Objectivity Through Innovation
PMFBY’s most transformative operational feature is its systematic deployment of technology to replace human subjectivity in loss assessment — the stage that had historically been the weakest link in India’s agricultural insurance chain:
| Technology Tool | Application in PMFBY |
|---|---|
| Remote Sensing and Satellite Imagery | Large-scale crop health monitoring and area-level yield loss assessment |
| Drone-Based Crop Survey | Localised damage assessment for post-harvest and calamity claims |
| Automated Weather Stations | Real-time weather data for weather-indexed assessment of climate risks |
| Smartphone-Based Crop Cutting Experiments | GPS-tagged photographic evidence from field crop cutting trials |
| Yield Estimation via AI and ML | Predictive yield modelling to supplement traditional crop cutting experiment data |
| PMFBY Portal and App | End-to-end claim notification, tracking, and settlement monitoring |
The smartphone-based crop cutting experiment system — where field investigators use a GPS-enabled application to record, photograph, and upload crop cutting data with tamper-proof location and time stamps — has substantially reduced the manipulation and data quality issues that plagued traditional crop cutting experiments conducted on paper. Farmers can also use the Crop Insurance App to self-report localised damage within 72 hours of occurrence — triggering the localised calamity assessment process without waiting for a government inspector to visit.
Claim Settlement Process and Timeline
PMFBY prescribes defined timelines for claim settlement to prevent the chronic delay that undermined confidence in previous agricultural insurance schemes:
| Settlement Stage | Prescribed Timeline |
|---|---|
| Farmer Intimation of Localised Loss | Within 72 hours of crop damage occurrence |
| Yield Data Submission by States | Within one month of the final harvest |
| Claim Settlement After Yield Data Submission | Within three weeks of receiving state yield data |
| On-Account Payment (Advance) | States can release up to 25% of likely claims as an advance payment to provide immediate relief |
| Final Claim Settlement | Complete within two months of harvest data availability |
The provision for 25% advance on-account payment is a critical liquidity bridge for farming families who need immediate cash to service debts or meet household expenses after a crop failure, without which the time lag between damage occurrence and final settlement can itself push families into acute financial distress.
Implementing Insurance Companies and State Partnerships
PMFBY is implemented through empanelled insurance companies — both public sector general insurers and private sector insurance companies — selected by states through a competitive bidding process:
| Implementing Agency Category | Examples |
|---|---|
| Public Sector Insurers | Agriculture Insurance Company of India (AIC), New India Assurance, United India Insurance |
| Private Sector Insurers | ICICI Lombard, HDFC Ergo, Bajaj Allianz, Reliance General Insurance, Tata AIG |
| Selection Process | State government tender — insurance companies bid cluster-wise for 3-year implementation contracts |
| Dispute Resolution | State Level Coordination Committee on Crop Insurance (SLCCCI) for grievance escalation |
The three-year cluster-based implementation contract encourages insurance companies to invest in ground infrastructure — including local offices, trained agronomists, and technology deployment — rather than treating PMFBY as a one-season transaction, improving the quality of service delivery over the contract period.
PMFBY’s Financial Scale and Reach
Since its launch in 2016, PMFBY has grown into one of the world’s largest agricultural insurance programmes by both premium volume and farmer coverage:
| Performance Metric | Achievement |
|---|---|
| Total Farmers Enrolled (Cumulative) | Over 36 crore farmer applications enrolled since inception |
| Total Premium Collected | Over ₹60,000 crore cumulative premium from all sources |
| Total Claims Paid | Over ₹1.50 lakh crore in claims disbursed to affected farmers |
| Claim Settlement Ratio | Among the highest in India’s general insurance sector |
| Area Covered Annually | Over 50 crore hectares insured per season at peak coverage |
| Top Enrolling States | Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Maharashtra, Uttar Pradesh, Karnataka |
The extraordinary claims-to-premium ratio — total claims disbursed substantially exceeding total farmer premium collected — is a direct reflection of the government subsidy architecture that makes PMFBY functional. The government’s willingness to absorb the actuarial risk premium gap is what enables affordable coverage for India’s 14 crore farming families.
Restructured PMFBY: Key Reforms That Strengthened the Scheme
Following a comprehensive review, the Government of India announced significant reforms to PMFBY in February 2020 that addressed criticisms and strengthened the scheme’s farmer-centricity:
The shift to voluntary enrolment for all farmers — including loanee farmers — was the most consequential reform, ending a period when farmers complained of compulsory premium deduction for a scheme they may not have chosen to join. States were simultaneously given the option to opt in or opt out of PMFBY based on their own agricultural insurance arrangements — a federalist flexibility that acknowledged that different states have different agricultural risk profiles and fiscal capacities.
The introduction of state-specific crop yield data submission deadlines with financial penalties for delays placed accountability on state governments that had previously been the most common source of claim settlement bottlenecks — creating a performance incentive structure that extended beyond farmers and insurers to encompass the state government machinery itself.
For India’s farming families — who collectively feed 1.4 billion people while bearing risks that no other profession faces with such unmediated personal exposure — PMFBY represents the state’s clearest, most financially substantial acknowledgement that agricultural risk is a national responsibility, not an individual burden to be carried alone in a field that has no ceiling and no safety net except the one that good policy can build and sustain.