
You’re a founder. Your product is shipping, contracts are being signed, and growth is accelerating. In the middle of it all, a pile of jargon-filled insurance papers on Directors & Officers (D&O), Cyber Liability, Professional Indemnity, etc., lands on your desk. You skim, sign, and stash them. Months later, a regulatory notice arrives. A customer sues. Or a data breach hits. Suddenly, those forgotten papers are your company’s lifeline, and you realize you never really understood them. This is the silent ticking time bomb that thousands of founders live with.
Covrzy, a Bengaluru-based insurtech startup, is on a mission to defuse that bomb. Founded in 2023 by Ankit Kamra and Veera Thota, Covrzy is systematically dismantling the opaque, archaic, and intimidating world of business insurance and rebuilding it with first principles for the digital-native builder.
Backed by Antler and Shastra VC, Covrzy has already helped 800+ businesses like Redcliffe Labs, Skit.ai, Orange Health Labs, and Karbon Business get the right protection in place. In 2024, Covrzy crossed a key milestone by securing a full broking license from IRDAI. Notably, in 2025, Covrzy partnered with Namma Yatri to offer affordable health cover to 50,000+ gig workers and their families.
In a conversation with Team ProdWrks, Ankit Kamra explains how he built Covrzy to simplify complex liability insurance for businesses on one hand, and embed micro-insurance for the new-age startups on the other.
Understanding Pain Points in Business Insurance
“As an operator in multiple startups, one pain point kept popping up: insurance was always like an afterthought, rarely the enabler,” Ankit recalls.
“Talk to just 10 founders within your closed circle,” Ankit challenges. “Ask them about their D&O insurance, or what a Professional Indemnity insurance is. You will not get a clear answer. You may not get an answer at all. That will give you a situation analysis of where we are as an ecosystem.”
Ankit says, “My goal was to eliminate all these risks and allow founders to just focus on what they are best at, which is growing their business. Covrzy was born to solve that by making business insurance accessible, digital, and contextual.”
Sizing Up a Vast, Underpenetrated Business Insurance Market
“The market is less than 0.7% insured with any business that has bought at least one business insurance policy. This means somebody who has purchased insurance to protect their business, whether it’s their stock or any sort of general or public liability policy.”
Covrzy has strategically positioned itself within this burgeoning market by focusing on what Ankit calls “the most underserved segment”: early-stage startups and SMEs with a turnover between ₹1 crore and ₹50 crore and fewer than 500 employees.
This segment is large enough to have significant liabilities but often too small to have a dedicated risk management or legal team. A significant portion of Covrzy’s 800+ clients come from high-risk, high-growth sectors like fintech, logistics, platform aggregators, and B2B/B2C SaaS. These are precisely the companies building India’s future, and precisely the ones who can least afford a catastrophic, uninsured event.
Covrzy’s Playbook
1. The B2B Platform: Policy Issued in Under 5 Minutes
“We were the first ones to actually build a checkout experience for a commercial insurance product,” says Ankit.
“A process that takes one and a half months offline, with back and forth, can be done in five minutes,” he says.
Ankit says, “You have to challenge the status quo. The first question I asked myself was, ‘Is it doable?’ The answer from the ecosystem was largely ‘no,’ because a lot of insurance companies don’t even have an infrastructure to date .”.
This is where Ankit’s experience in partnerships and product creation at places like Plum and Karbon Cards became Covrzy’s superpower. Instead of waiting for insurers to build modern APIs, the Covrzy team took a different approach.
“We started working with a lot of insurers, understanding to what extent it is doable. Do they have API endpoints to collect information digitally? If not, can we build that infrastructure on their behalf? What is the way this information sharing will happen?”
2. The Embedded Insurance Route (B2B2C)
“We have created a gig worker insurance product where driver captains of Namma Yatri can insure themselves and their family members.”
“We were there on the ground, did a lot of surveys on what is the market ask, what sort of sum insured they are looking for, and what is the different sort of support they are looking at, whether it’s call-first or tech-first.”
This deep ethnographic research unearthed critical insights that shaped the final product:
- Vernacular is Non-Negotiable: The platform was built in local languages to ensure comprehension and trust.
- Context is Everything: The insurance product is embedded within the driver app, a familiar digital environment.
- Payment Models Must Match Cash Flow: They designed flexible payment options, like weekly or monthly premiums, to align with a gig worker’s income cycle.
“The moment you make it easier for them to understand and consume the content, that’s when large-scale adoption happens,” says Ankit.
A Founder’s Guide to Building in Regulated Waters
The process to get Covrzy’s IRDAI broking license took eight to nine months, which is a lifetime in the startup world. Ankit candidly shares that navigating a regulated industry like insurance is daunting. His advice for founders entering similar domains is practical.
First, don’t let the regulatory timeline dictate your entire roadmap.
Ankit says, “Being a startup, you should be flexible on how to get the work done. A lot of fintechs that have now become NBFCs didn’t start as one on day one. You start with something that makes it easier for your end user to consume and buy, and once that starts happening, you figure out the next roadmap.”
Second, be deeply strategic about which license you need, and why. Ankit says that the key question to ask is: “For me to scale in the next year for what I’m building, do I really need a license?”
For Covrzy, the decision to pursue a broking license, and not just continue with a simpler (to obtain) web aggregator one, was driven by their product strategy. They needed the ability to underwrite higher-value, more complex proposals for their mid-market and enterprise clients, something a basic license wouldn’t permit.
So, what does Covrzy look like at scale? Ankit’s vision extends far beyond being just a better broker. He draws an analogy to the evolution of Policybazaar, which grew from a simple comparison site into a multi-vertical insurance behemoth.
He says, “At scale, Covrzy could become a specialized insurance company in itself. Today, you have general insurance companies and specialized health insurance companies. We think of ourselves as a specialized insurance company that focuses on digital-first products, specifically for B2B2C use cases.”
The Uncomfortable Truths of Building in a Legacy Market
Ankit is refreshingly candid about the fact that Covrzy is still far from achieving product-market fit. “100% no,” he laughed when we asked. “It’s too early. But there are quite a few early signals that are sounding positive.”
Ankit explains that these early signals are organic pulls that every early-stage founder looks for and knows intuitively when they experience them.
“For instance, your existing customers start referring your products to other customers in their circle. On the B2B2C side, your partners start going in-depth with you. They pick up one product, then another, then another. They start creating an ecosystem with you.”
Breaking Assumptions in B2B Insurance
He says, “I thought if we made insurance very simple for founders or SMEs to buy, it's a no-brainer, they'll buy it. We thought people would buy it if it's cheap, it covers all the risk, it’s the best coverage, and it’s online. But what we realized was the market was entirely different.”
He shares three hard-won lessons that should be required reading for any B2B founder:
1. Awareness is Abysmal: The market is still driven by offline relationships. So, you aren’t just selling a better insurance product. You are also evangelizing an entirely new way of how businesses are thinking about risk.
2. Influence the Influencer: Sometimes, the path to the decision-maker (the founder or CFO) is through the person who has their ear. It could be an operations head, a finance manager. Identifying and empowering these internal champions can be more effective than a direct sales pitch.
3. Trust Trumps Everything: Even with matching price and a superior digital experience, insurance buying decisions of businesses are often made based on long-standing relationships with brokers. Building a new brand in insurance requires immense effort in trust-building, one customer at a time.
The metrics they track reflect this ambition. They monitor Gross Written Premium (GWP) and the number of policies issued (currently averaging 250,000-300,000 per month), but they also obsess over a “Claims Happiness Index”, which is an internal metric measuring how closely the settled claim amount matches the customer’s expectation.
This focus is what separates transactional businesses from enduring ones. And Covrzy is building this future with remarkable financial discipline. After closing last year with around $60,000 in revenue, Ankit shared that they are on track to 3-4x that this year, all while operating at break-even.