The financial shockwaves of the GenZ protests are now reverberating through Nepal’s insurance industry, with non-life insurers inundated by claims worth an estimated Rs 20.70 billion. The surge reflects the scale of destruction from the September 8–9 agitation that left private businesses reeling.
Data from the Nepal Insurance Authority (NIA) shows 1,984 claims filed so far, almost entirely tied to private properties and enterprises. Since public structures were not insured, insurers have avoided exposure there—though government vehicles are included under third-party liability coverage.
Some companies are under severe strain. Oriental Insurance alone has received claims of Rs 5.147 billion, followed by Siddhartha Premier Insurance with 258 claims totaling Rs 4.93 billion, and Shikhar Insurance with 366 claims amounting to Rs 2.39 billion.
The fallout extends to the government-owned Nepal Reinsurance Company (NRIC), which has absorbed liabilities of Rs 11.77 billion across 14 non-life insurers. Among the largest claims are those linked to high-profile institutions and businesses such as Bhatbhateni Superstore, Kantipur Media House, Ullens School, CG Impex, United Distributors, and the looting of 18 kg of gold from Rastriya Banijya Bank’s New Baneshwor branch. Hotels like Bagaicha (Pokhara) and Sarobar are also on the list.
The staggering claims burden underscores the deep financial scars of a movement that escalated into vandalism and arson, targeting some of Nepal’s most prominent names in commerce and media. As insurers and reinsurers process the flood of claims, the broader economic toll of the GenZ uprising is only beginning to surface—stretching well beyond the visible wreckage.