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Accident Claim Insurance: How To Claim in Malaysia?

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Accident Claim Insurance: How To Claim in Malaysia?

Dealing with a car accident is stressful enough without the added worry of navigating the insurance claim process. Whether you caused the accident, the other driver was at fault, or it was a genuine 50-50, knowing how to claim insurance for a car accident in Malaysia — and which type of claim to file — can save you thousands of ringgit and weeks of frustration.

This guide walks you through the entire process step by step: from what to do at the accident scene, to choosing the right claim type (own damage, OD-KFK, or third-party), to getting your car repaired at a panel workshop and following up until settlement. We also cover common pitfalls, excess charges, NCD implications, and the latest BNM reforms that speed up settlements.

Understanding Car Accident Insurance Claims in Malaysia

Before filing a claim, it helps to understand what your policy actually covers and which claim route applies to your situation. Getting this right at the outset avoids rejected claims, surprise out-of-pocket costs, and unnecessary NCD losses.

Types of Motor Insurance Policies

Malaysia has three types of motor insurance policies, and the one you hold determines what you can claim:

Policy Type Third-Party Damage Fire & Theft Own Vehicle Damage Windscreen
Third-Party Only Yes No No No
Third-Party, Fire & Theft Yes Yes No No
Comprehensive Yes Yes Yes Yes (add-on)

Key takeaway: Only a comprehensive policy lets you claim for your own vehicle’s accident damage. If you hold third-party only or third-party fire & theft, you can only claim against the at-fault driver’s insurer — and if you caused the accident, your own repairs are entirely out of pocket.

Three Claim Routes After an Accident

Under a comprehensive policy, there are three main ways to claim, each with different NCD and cost implications:

Claim Type When to Use NCD Impact You Pay
Own Damage (OD) You caused the accident, or fault is unclear Resets to 0% Excess + betterment (if applicable)
Own Damage Knock-for-Knock (OD-KFK) Other driver at fault (police report confirms) NCD preserved Excess only (usually refunded later)
Third-Party Claim Claim against the at-fault driver’s insurer Your NCD unaffected Nothing (but slower process)

The OD-KFK route is usually the fastest — you claim through your own insurer’s panel workshop, get repaired quickly, and your NCD stays intact because the police report establishes the other driver was at fault. All insurance and takaful companies in Malaysia participate in the Knock-for-Knock agreement (originally signed in 1987, revised June 2001), so your insurer settles with the other insurer behind the scenes.

Important exception: OD-KFK does not apply if the accident involves public transport vehicles (buses, taxis) or results in bodily injury — in those cases, the claim must go against the at-fault party’s insurer directly.

Step-by-Step: How to Claim Car Accident Insurance in Malaysia

Here is the complete process from accident scene to settlement, with the specific timelines and requirements Malaysian insurers expect.

Step 1: Secure the Scene and Gather Evidence

The first few minutes after an accident are critical — both for safety and for your claim.

  1. Ensure safety first. Turn on hazard lights, set up a warning triangle, and move to the roadside if possible. Call 999 for emergency medical help if there are injuries.
  2. Do NOT move the vehicles until you have photographic evidence — unless they are blocking traffic dangerously.
  3. Photograph everything: all vehicles from multiple angles showing damage and registration plates, the overall accident scene (road markings, traffic lights, skid marks), close-ups of damage to both vehicles, and the other driver’s license, insurance sticker, and road tax.
  4. Exchange details with the other driver: full name, IC number, phone number, insurance company, and policy number.
  5. Get witness contacts — even a dashcam timestamp from a nearby vehicle can be valuable.

Pro tip: Use your phone’s video mode to do a slow walk-around of the entire scene. Video captures more context than individual photos and includes timestamps automatically.

Step 2: Lodge a Police Report Within 24 Hours

Under the Road Transport Act 1987, you must lodge a police report within 24 hours of any accident involving injury, death, or damage to a third party’s property. Even for single-vehicle incidents with no third-party involvement, filing within 24 hours is strongly recommended — late reports raise red flags with insurers and can lead to claim denial.

You can lodge a report:

  • In person at the nearest police station (bring your IC, driving license, and road tax)
  • Online via PDRM e-Reporting at ereporting.rmp.gov.my — currently available for single-vehicle accidents with no injuries on selected PLUS highways (E1, E2, NKVE, ELITE, BKE), for privately-owned, non-commercial vehicles

After lodging, the police will issue a Police Investigation Outcome document. This is the single most important document for your claim — it determines fault and directly affects whether you qualify for an OD-KFK claim (NCD preserved) or must file an own-damage claim (NCD resets). The investigation outcome typically takes 3–10 working days to finalise, and in 2026 this remains the number-one cause of extended workshop stays.

Step 3: Notify Your Insurer Immediately

Contact your insurance company within 24 hours, and no later than 7 days from the accident date. Most major insurers (Allianz, AXA/Generali, Zurich, MSIG, Etiqa, Takaful Malaysia) have 24/7 hotlines and mobile app reporting.

When you call, have ready: your policy number, the police report number, a description of the accident, and the other driver’s details. The insurer will advise which claim type applies (OD, OD-KFK, or third-party) and assign you to a panel workshop.

Step 4: Gather and Submit Required Documents

Your insurer will provide a claim form. Submit it with:

Document Purpose Where to Get It
Completed claim form Formal claim request Insurer (online/branch)
Police report (certified copy) Establishes incident & fault Police station or MyBayar PDRM
Driving license (copy) Confirms valid driving authority Your own records
Vehicle registration card / grant (copy) Confirms vehicle ownership Your own records
Photos/video of damage Visual evidence for assessment Your phone
Repair estimate Cost assessment Panel workshop provides this
Police Investigation Outcome Determines fault (critical for OD-KFK) Police station (may take 3–10 days)

Keep copies of everything. Photograph each document before submitting originals.

Step 5: Send Your Vehicle to a Panel Workshop

This is where the claim type makes a real financial difference:

Panel workshop (recommended): Your insurer’s approved workshop handles the repair and bills the insurer directly — you enjoy cashless repair and only pay the excess amount. The workshop staff are experienced in managing claim paperwork and will liaise with the insurer on your behalf.

Non-panel / own workshop: You pay for repairs upfront and submit receipts for reimbursement. This adds 2–4 extra weeks to the process, and the insurer may dispute labour rates, parts pricing, or repair scope. Reimbursement is not guaranteed to cover the full amount you paid.

Vehicles under 5 years old can typically be sent to an authorised service centre (franchise workshop) where repairs use original manufacturer parts. Vehicles over 5 years are generally directed to panel workshops.

Critical rule: Do NOT repair anything before the insurer’s adjuster inspects the damage. Pre-repaired damage cannot be verified, and your claim will almost certainly be rejected.

Step 6: Claim Assessment and Settlement

After inspection, the insurer approves repairs and the workshop begins work. Typical timelines:

Scenario Typical Timeline
Straightforward panel workshop claim 2–4 weeks
Claim requiring police investigation outcome 3–6 weeks (investigation is the bottleneck)
Complex or disputed claim 6–10 weeks
Non-panel reimbursement claim Add 2–4 weeks on top

Under the revised BNM Claims Settlement Practices Policy Document (PDCSP), insurers must now publish a Motor Customer Service Charter with transparent turnaround times, including criteria for fast-track claims. This reform — developed by Bank Negara Malaysia in collaboration with insurers, the Ministry of Transport, JPJ, and Puspakom — has reduced own-damage claim settlement times by approximately 20 working days compared to previous benchmarks.

Step 7: Follow Up Proactively

Don’t assume silence means progress. Check in with both the workshop and your insurer every 3–5 working days. Ask specifically:

  • Has the police investigation outcome been received?
  • Has the adjuster approved the repair scope?
  • Are there any betterment charges or disputed items?
  • What is the estimated completion date?

If your claim is not progressing, escalate through the insurer’s complaint channel. Under the revised PDCSP, insurers must respond to complaints within 5 working days (effective April 2026).

Understanding Excess, Betterment, and NCD

These three cost factors catch many drivers off guard. Knowing them in advance helps you budget realistically and avoid disputes at the workshop.

Excess (Compulsory and Voluntary)

Excess is the amount you must pay out of pocket each time you make a claim. There are two types:

  • Compulsory excess: Typically RM400 under Section A2g of your policy — this applies if the driver at the time of the accident is under 21, holds a provisional/learner licence, or is not a named driver on the policy. If the driver is a named driver aged 21+ with a valid full licence, many policies waive this.
  • Voluntary excess: An amount you choose when purchasing the policy (e.g., RM500–RM1,000) in exchange for a lower premium. This is payable on top of any compulsory excess.

Money-saving tip: A Waiver of Compulsory Excess add-on costs only RM20–RM30 per year and saves you RM400 per claim. Worth considering if younger drivers use your vehicle.

Betterment Charges

Betterment is a deduction applied when old, worn parts are replaced with brand-new ones — the insurer’s logic is that you have gained an improvement over the part’s pre-accident condition. Betterment typically applies to wear-and-tear components (tyres, battery, headlamps, bumpers on older vehicles) but NOT to structural repairs, panel work, or labour.

Betterment charges are more common on vehicles over 5 years old. You can avoid them entirely by purchasing a Betterment Waiver add-on (approximately RM50–RM120 per year), which ensures 100% coverage for replacement parts regardless of vehicle age.

No Claim Discount (NCD) — What’s at Stake

NCD is a progressive discount on your motor insurance premium. Here is the standard scale:

Claim-Free Years NCD Percentage
Year 1 25%
Year 2 30%
Year 3 38.33%
Year 4 45%
Year 5+ 55%

Worked example: On a RM2,000 base premium, a 55% NCD saves you RM1,100 — you pay only RM900 (before SST and stamp duty). If you file an own-damage claim, your NCD resets to 0% at your next renewal, and it takes 6 claim-free years to rebuild to 55%. That one claim effectively costs you RM1,100+ in lost discounts over subsequent years.

Decision framework — should you claim or pay out of pocket?

  • If repair costs are under RM1,000–RM1,500 and you currently have 45–55% NCD, it may be cheaper to pay for repairs yourself and preserve your discount.
  • If the other driver is at fault and the police report confirms it, always file an OD-KFK claim — your NCD is preserved.
  • If damage is significant (RM3,000+), an own-damage claim usually makes sense even with the NCD reset.

Common Mistakes That Get Claims Rejected

Insurance claims are rejected more often than most drivers expect. Here are the most common reasons — and how to avoid each one.

1. Filing the Police Report Late

The 24-hour window is legally mandated under the Road Transport Act 1987. Late reports not only risk a fine — they give insurers grounds to question the legitimacy of the claim or dispute the circumstances. Even if you are unsure about making a claim, lodge the report first. You can decide whether to claim later.

2. Repairing Before the Adjuster Inspects

This is the fastest way to get a claim denied. Insurers need to verify the actual damage — once parts are replaced or bodywork is repaired, they cannot confirm what happened. Always wait for the adjuster’s assessment, even if the delay is frustrating.

3. Submitting Incomplete Documents

A missing police report, unsigned claim form, or absent vehicle registration copy will stall your claim. Prepare the full document set (see the table in Step 4) before submitting, rather than drip-feeding paperwork.

4. Not Understanding Your Policy Coverage

Drivers with third-party only policies sometimes attempt to file own-damage claims, which are simply not covered. Similarly, some add-ons (windscreen cover, betterment waiver, special perils) are optional — check your policy schedule before assuming coverage exists.

5. Filing an OD Claim When OD-KFK Applies

If the accident was not your fault and you have a police investigation outcome confirming this, filing a standard own-damage claim instead of OD-KFK means you unnecessarily lose your NCD. Always ask your insurer about OD-KFK eligibility — it is frequently overlooked.

Tips for a Faster, Smoother Claim

  1. Install a dashcam. Footage provides irrefutable evidence of fault and dramatically speeds up the police investigation outcome. Many insurers now offer premium discounts for dashcam-equipped vehicles.
  2. Use a panel workshop. Cashless repair, direct insurer billing, and experienced claim-handling staff make the process significantly faster than non-panel alternatives.
  3. Keep your insurer’s hotline number saved in your phone. In the stress of an accident, you don’t want to be searching for contact details.
  4. Check your NCD before deciding to claim. You can verify your current NCD status through the MyCarInfo portal or your insurer’s app.
  5. Consider add-ons at renewal. Waiver of Compulsory Excess (RM20–RM30/year) and Betterment Waiver (RM50–RM120/year) are inexpensive but save hundreds per claim.
  6. Document everything in writing. Follow up phone calls with an email or SMS summarising what was discussed. This creates a paper trail if disputes arise.

Frequently Asked Questions


How long does a car insurance claim take in Malaysia?

Straightforward panel workshop claims typically settle in 2–4 weeks. Complex or disputed claims can take 6–10 weeks. The main bottleneck is usually the police investigation outcome (3–10 working days). Using a non-panel workshop adds another 2–4 weeks for reimbursement processing.

What is the difference between OD and OD-KFK claims?

An Own Damage (OD) claim is when you claim under your own comprehensive policy for damage you caused (or when fault is unclear). Your NCD resets to 0%. An OD-KFK (Knock-for-Knock) claim also uses your own policy, but applies when the other driver was at fault (confirmed by police report). Under OD-KFK, your NCD is preserved because your insurer recovers costs from the other party’s insurer under the industry Knock-for-Knock agreement.

Will making a claim affect my NCD?

It depends on the claim type. An own-damage claim resets your NCD to 0%, requiring 6 claim-free years to rebuild to 55%. An OD-KFK claim preserves your NCD because the other driver was at fault. Third-party claims (against the other driver’s insurer) do not affect your NCD. Windscreen-only claims under a separate windscreen add-on also typically do not affect NCD.

What is the excess I need to pay when claiming?

Compulsory excess under Section A2g of most policies is RM400, applicable if the driver is under 21, holds a provisional licence, or is not a named driver. If the driver is a named driver aged 21+ with a full licence, this is often waived. Voluntary excess (an amount you chose at policy purchase) is payable on top. You can purchase a Waiver of Compulsory Excess add-on for RM20–RM30/year to eliminate the RM400 charge.

Can I claim if the accident was my fault?

Yes, if you have a comprehensive policy. You file an own-damage claim for your vehicle repairs and pay the excess. Your NCD will reset to 0% at your next renewal. If you only have third-party or third-party fire & theft coverage, your own vehicle damage is not covered.

What happens if I miss the 24-hour deadline for the police report?

You can still lodge a report, but a late report may face scrutiny. Insurers may use the delay as grounds to question the claim’s validity. Under the Road Transport Act 1987, failing to report within 24 hours for accidents involving injuries or third-party damage is an offence. Lodge the report as soon as possible and explain the reason for the delay.

Should I claim or pay for minor repairs myself?

If the other driver was at fault, always claim via OD-KFK — there is no downside. If you were at fault, compare the repair cost against the NCD you would lose. For example, with 55% NCD on a RM2,000 premium, losing your discount costs RM1,100+ over subsequent years. Repairs under RM1,000–RM1,500 are often better paid out of pocket.

What is betterment and do I have to pay it?

Betterment is a deduction applied when worn parts on your vehicle are replaced with new ones — the insurer considers this an “improvement.” It typically applies to wear-and-tear components on vehicles over 5 years old. You can avoid betterment charges entirely by purchasing a Betterment Waiver add-on (RM50–RM120/year).

Conclusion

Claiming car accident insurance in Malaysia does not have to be overwhelming if you follow the right steps in the right order: secure the scene and gather evidence, lodge a police report within 24 hours, notify your insurer promptly, use a panel workshop for cashless repair, and follow up consistently until settlement.

The most impactful decision is choosing the correct claim type — an OD-KFK claim when the other driver is at fault preserves your NCD and is processed faster, while understanding excess and betterment charges helps you avoid surprises at the workshop. With BNM’s recent reforms making the process fairer and faster, Malaysian drivers now have stronger protections and clearer service standards than ever before.

For more guidance on choosing the right motor insurance policy, see our guide to the best car insurance in Malaysia, or explore our comparison of top insurance companies in Malaysia. If you are an e-hailing driver, our e-hailing insurance guide covers the specific coverage requirements for ride-hailing vehicles.

Content verified June 2026. Insurance policies, premiums, and procedures vary by provider — always confirm details directly with your insurer or takaful operator before making decisions. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or legal advice.

Disclaimer: KayaToday provides this guide for educational and informational purposes. We are not licensed insurance agents or financial advisors. Always consult with a qualified professional for advice specific to your situation.

Aisha Liyana, an expert in the Malaysian insurance market, specializes in life, health, and property insurance. Her articles, rich in practical advice and detailed coverage analysis, guide Malaysians in making informed insurance decisions. Aisha focuses on policy comparisons and risk management, aiming to enhance financial well-being and protection.
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