QBE takes full control of India's Raheja QBE general insurer

The Australian insurer has bought out its joint-venture partner in one of the first fully foreign-owned deals since India lifted its ownership cap

QBE takes full control of India's Raheja QBE general insurer

Insurance News

By Daniel Wood

QBE Insurance Group has completed its full acquisition of Raheja QBE General Insurance Company, taking sole ownership of the Mumbai-based carrier and drawing a line under an 18-year joint venture with Indian building materials group Prism Johnson.

In a media release today, the Sydney-headquartered global insurer and reinsurer said it now holds 100% of the Indian business, following approval from the Insurance Regulatory and Development Authority of India (IRDAI). The carrier, until now known as Raheja QBE, will operate simply as QBE.

For a market global insurers have circled for years, the deal could be a notable marker. It is among the first moves to full foreign ownership of an Indian insurer since the country lifted its long-standing cap on overseas shareholding, and it hands QBE unbroken control of a business it has co-owned since 2007.

"India is one of the world's most dynamic markets – and we are well positioned to deploy QBE's capabilities and unlock the next phase of growth in a country we believe has enormous long-term potential," said Rob Kosova (pictured), CEO of QBE Asia.

Why the timing matters

The completion follows a sweeping change to India's foreign investment rules. Under reforms tied to the Sabka Bima Sabki Raksha (Amendment of Insurance Laws) Act, 2025, the government lifted the foreign direct investment ceiling for insurers from 74% to 10%, with most provisions taking effect in February 2026. The change removed the need for overseas insurers to keep a local joint venture partner purely to satisfy ownership limits.

That shift has already prompted movement across the sector, with rival Zurich Insurance taking a controlling position in Kotak Mahindra General Insurance. QBE's buyout of Prism Johnson's remaining stake places it among the earliest to convert a legacy joint venture into a wholly owned operation.

The appeal is not hard to read. India is projected to become the world's sixth-largest insurance market by 2032, according to analysis from Grant Thornton Bharat, yet insurance penetration sits at roughly 3.7 per cent of GDP – around half the global average – leaving significant room to grow. Non-life premiums have expanded at a faster pace than life cover over the past two decades.

What it signals for the market

For brokers and underwriters watching the region, the transaction is less about a single carrier than about direction of travel. Full ownership gives global insurers freer rein over capital, product design and technology in a market where distribution and pricing remain fiercely competitive.

QBE has framed the move as one of continuity rather than disruption. "While ownership is changing, our focus remains exactly the same: supporting our customers, partners and people," Kosova said. "Our priority is to build on the strong foundations already in place, preserve continuity for customers and create new opportunities for growth, innovation and career development. We are excited to welcome the India team fully into the QBE family and to shape the future of this business together."

Sole ownership, the insurer said, will let it explore new opportunities for product and operational innovation aimed at customer-focused solutions across the Indian market. Both the QBE Asia and former Raheja QBE teams will continue to run the local business.

Raheja QBE, headquartered in Mumbai, writes personal and commercial lines including motor, health, property and liability cover. QBE Insurance Group, listed on the Australian Securities Exchange, employs more than 12,000 people across some 30 countries.

For QBE, the deal caps a patient build in a market it has signalled as central to its regional ambitions. For the wider industry, it is an early test of how quickly global insurers will move now that India's door has opened wider than at any point in the sector's modern history.

Keep up with the latest news and events

Join our mailing list, it’s free!