Many motor insurance claims in India are rejected for one seemingly small reason: an expired driving licence.
But a recent High Court ruling has made one thing clear — expiry does not always mean invalidity.
The Punjab and Haryana High Court has ruled that a driving licence continues to remain legally effective for 30 days after expiry, and insurers cannot deny accident compensation solely on this ground if the accident occurs within this statutory grace period.

This judgment brings much-needed clarity for policyholders and accident victims who often face technical claim rejections.
What Does the Law Say About Licence Expiry?
Under Section 14 of the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988, a driving licence carries a 30-day statutory grace period after its expiry date.
During this time:
- The licence is treated as legally valid
- The driver is considered entitled to drive
- Insurers cannot automatically reject claims
The purpose of this provision is to prevent genuine drivers and accident victims from being penalised due to short procedural delays.
What Was the Case About?
- The driver’s licence expired on June 4
- An accident occurred on July 4 at around 10:45 am
- The licence was renewed later, on August 6
- The insurance company argued that the driver had no valid licence on the accident date
However, the court observed that:
- The 30-day grace period ran until midnight of July 4
- The accident happened well within this statutory period
- Therefore, the licence was legally effective at the time of the accident
As a result, the insurer was:
- Held liable to pay compensation
- Denied recovery rights against the driver
Why Did the Court Reject the Insurer’s Argument?
The court reaffirmed a fundamental principle of motor insurance law:
The grace period exists precisely to protect drivers and injured parties from technical and unfair denials.
An insurer cannot rely only on the expiry date printed on the licence. Instead, it must show a real breach of policy conditions, such as:
- No licence at all
- Disqualification from driving
- Driving a vehicle without the required category endorsement
- Proven negligence linked to licence status
What Does This Mean for Policyholders?
This ruling offers strong protection to drivers and accident victims:
✅ Claims cannot be rejected just because the licence expired recently
✅ Accidents within the 30-day grace period remain covered
✅ Compensation cannot be denied on technical grounds alone
The judgment is binding in Punjab and Haryana and carries persuasive value for courts across India, making it highly relevant for similar ongoing and future cases.
What This Does NOT Mean
It’s important to avoid misinterpretation.
❌ This ruling does not excuse long-expired licences
❌ It does not allow indefinite driving without renewal
❌ It does not protect cases involving disqualification or fake licences
Drivers must still renew their licences promptly.
The judgment only ensures that short procedural delays do not result in loss of rightful compensation.
Why This Ruling Is Important for the Insurance Ecosystem
In practice, many genuine claims fail because:
- Policyholders are unaware of legal protections
- Claims teams rely on rigid technical interpretations
- Consumers give up after initial rejection
This ruling pushes insurers to:
- Focus on substance over form
- Evaluate whether the driver was legally entitled to drive
- Reduce unfair claim denials based on paperwork alone
Final Thoughts
Motor insurance is meant to provide financial protection during distress, not become a tool for technical rejection.
This judgment is a reminder that:
- Knowing your rights matters
- Not every rejection is final
- Courts continue to uphold consumer protection over procedural rigidity
If your motor claim has been rejected due to licence expiry, check the dates carefully.
The law may be on your side.
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FAQs
Yes, for 30 days after expiry, as per Section 14 of the Motor Vehicles Act.
No, if the accident occurred within the 30-day grace period.
The ruling is binding in Punjab and Haryana and persuasive elsewhere.
Absolutely. The grace period is a legal safeguard, not a replacement for renewal.