
If you’ve travelled through North India between December and February, this scene feels familiar. Winter doesn’t just bring cold, it brings chaos. Fog shuts down runways, flights stack up, baggage goe...

Every winter, roadside assistance teams and insurers see the same pattern. As temperatures drop, breakdown calls surge.

This is a reality many NRIs discover the hard way: Having insurance isn’t enough if no one can legally use it when it matters.

In 2025, fog season once again reminded drivers that safety on winter roads isn’t about driving skill alone. It’s about readiness.

As 2025 winds down, most of us think about holidays or tax-saving investments. But one task deserves attention: reviewing your health insurance truly understanding it, not just confirming it exists.

The dropping temperatures and unpredictable weather aren't just uncomfortable but they put real strain on ageing bodies.
After the recent Red Fort blast in Delhi, conversations around safety surged. But one angle remained largely unspoken: insurance preparedness.

Delhi air pollution: According to industry data, respiratory-related hospitalizations in Delhi jumped from 5–6% in early 2024 to 17–18% in the second half of the year.

Travel insurance often seems relevant only for international trips, but domestic travel insurance serves a distinct purpose during road travel, especially during festivals.

During Diwali, this distinction becomes critical: streets are crowded, celebrations unpredictable, and parked cars suddenly vulnerable in ways that don’t exist the rest of the year.
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