Prime Minister Narendra Modi's plan to provide health insurance for about half the country's population would require an estimated 110bn rupees ($1.7bn) in federal and state funding each year, sources familiar with the matter said.
The scheme, which the government dubs "Modicare", was announced in Thursday's federal budget for 2018/19 and would provide 100 million families, or about 500 million poor people, with health cover of 500,000 rupees per year for free treatment of serious ailments.
Several Indian states now offer health insurance but these schemes are generally small and poorly implemented.
Modi faces a national election next year and the new health programme is seen as a signature initiative to woo voters in the countryside, many of whom struggle with high healthcare costs.
The government estimates the cost of insuring each family under the new scheme at about 1,100 rupees ($17.15), said a government official who had direct knowledge of the matter and did not want to be identified.
Officials have said "the world's largest government funded health care programme" would have a federal allocation of 20bn rupees in 2018-19, but added that more funds would be made available as the programme is rolled out over the year.
Some critics have raised doubts whether 20bn rupees in federal funding is enough to support the programme for 2018-19.
However, the government official said of the 110bn rupees in premiums required to fund the programme, the federal government would contribute about 70bn rupees with the 29 states providing the rest.
The 50bn rupees in federal funding on top of the budget allocation of 20bn rupees would be made available as the scheme details are worked out over the coming months, the official said.
"Government health insurance companies have readily agreed to fund the programme (at this cost)," the official said.
Health cess
A second source familiar with the planning said the government could also partly use the funds raised from a newly imposed 1% health cess on taxable incomes, and the health scheme would also benefit from the planned merger of three state-run insurance firms announced in Thursday's budget.
"It's a big pool (of people), when you have a mamoth insurance company, the task becomes easier," said the source, adding that the government's premium payments for the scheme were expected to be low and manageable.
Modi's government on Thursday also raised the federal health budget by 11.5% to $8.3bn for 2018-19.
The measures are Modi's latest attempt to reform a public health system that faces a shortage of hospitals and doctors. The government has also in recent years capped prices of critical drugs and medical devices and increased health funding.
Still, India spends only about 1% of its GDP on public health, among the world's lowest, and the health ministry estimates such funding leads to "catastrophic" expenses that push 7% of the population into poverty each year.
A top official at a state-run insurance company said the government will take 4 to 6 months to finalise the contours of the health plan since it would take time to get hospitals on board.
Nevertheless, a government-sponsored health programme will come as a major boost for the private hospital sector in India.
Overburdened public hospitals mean nearly 70% of healthcare delivery is in the hands of private players.
The scheme "will be a game changer," said Prathap Reddy, chairman of India's Apollo Hospitals Enterprise Ltd.