Ayurveda has gained global recognition from the World Health Organization. But in most countries, patients still have to pay for treatment entirely out of pocket. Why?
Over the past few years, Ayurveda has reached several important milestones.
The World Health Organization (WHO) has recognized Ayurveda as an important part of traditional and integrative healthcare. India has also established the WHO Global Traditional Medicine Centre in Jamnagar, backed by significant government investment, to strengthen research, collaboration, and innovation in traditional medicine.
These achievements are important.
They show that Ayurveda is receiving increasing attention at the global level.
But if someone living in London, New York, or Berlin wants Ayurvedic treatment, they’re probably paying for it themselves.
Even if Ayurveda is recognized, it is still not covered by most health insurance plans.
Recognition and access are not the same thing.
Recognition Is Only the First Step
The WHO Global Traditional Medicine Strategy (2025–2034) encourages countries to strengthen research, improve safety and regulation, and integrate traditional medicine into healthcare systems where appropriate.
This is an important step forward.
It gives traditional medicine, including Ayurveda, greater visibility in global health discussions.
However, recognition by the WHO does not automatically mean that a treatment becomes part of a country’s healthcare system.
Every country has its own rules for licensing practitioners, approving medicines, and deciding what treatments insurance companies will pay for.
That is where Ayurveda still faces significant challenges.
What the Current Situation Looks Like
India’s own report, Strategic Roadmap for Making Ayurveda Global, prepared by NITI Aayog and PwC, highlights this gap.
According to the report:
- Ayurveda currently has formal recognition in only a limited number of countries.
- In many international markets, Ayurvedic products are still classified as dietary supplements rather than medicines.
- Insurance coverage for Ayurvedic treatment remains very limited outside India.
This means that although awareness of Ayurveda is growing, access to affordable treatment has not kept pace.
For many patients, cost remains a major barrier.
India Has Already Shown That Insurance Can Work
Interestingly, this challenge has already been addressed within India.
Health insurance regulations now require insurers to provide coverage for AYUSH treatments, including Ayurveda, under specific conditions.
Many insurance policies now reimburse eligible Ayurvedic treatments in the same way they reimburse conventional medical care.
Hospitals that meet the required standards can offer insured Ayurvedic treatments to patients.
This demonstrates that insurance coverage for Ayurveda is possible.
The systems already exist.
The question is how similar models can be developed internationally.
Why Insurance Matters
Insurance does more than reduce healthcare costs.
It also builds trust.
When an insurance company agrees to cover a treatment, it usually means that the treatment has passed careful reviews related to safety, effectiveness, practitioner qualifications, and clinical evidence.
Without insurance coverage, many patients simply cannot afford long-term care, regardless of how beneficial a treatment may be.
That limits access and slows wider adoption.
Traditional Chinese Medicine Offers an Important Example
Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) has made greater progress in this area.
In countries such as Switzerland, certain TCM treatments are included within the national health insurance system when provided by appropriately qualified medical professionals.
This did not happen overnight.
It was the result of years of research, standardized education, practitioner certification, and collaboration with healthcare regulators.
Ayurveda has not yet reached the same stage in most countries.
In many places, it is still classified alongside wellness services rather than integrated into mainstream healthcare.
Why This Gap Still Exists
Insurance providers make decisions based on evidence.
They want answers to questions such as:
- Does the treatment improve patient outcomes?
- Is it safe?
- Does it reduce long-term healthcare costs?
- Are practitioners properly trained and regulated?
While research in Ayurveda continues to grow, India’s own policy roadmap acknowledges that larger international clinical studies and stronger evidence are still needed.
This is one of the biggest reasons insurance coverage remains limited.
Recognition creates awareness.
Evidence creates confidence.
Insurance depends on confidence.
What Needs to Happen Next
The good news is that the path forward is becoming clearer.
Several steps could help Ayurveda become more widely accepted by healthcare systems and insurance providers around the world.
These include:
- Conducting more high-quality clinical research that meets international standards.
- Generating cost-effectiveness data to demonstrate how Ayurvedic care may reduce long-term healthcare expenses.
- Creating internationally recognized credentialing systems for qualified Ayurvedic physicians.
- Expanding the proposed Global Ayurveda Register so practitioner qualifications can be easily verified.
- Working with governments and insurers to launch pilot insurance programs in countries with growing interest in Ayurveda.
These efforts would provide the evidence and infrastructure that insurers need before expanding coverage.
Recognition Is Important. Access Is the Goal.
The WHO’s recognition of Ayurveda is an important milestone.
It reflects growing international respect for one of the world’s oldest healthcare systems.
But recognition alone does not make treatment affordable.
Patients benefit most when qualified practitioners are accessible, treatments are properly regulated, and insurance makes care financially possible.
India has already shown that this model can work domestically.
The next challenge is building similar systems internationally.
If research, regulation, and professional standards continue to improve, Ayurveda will be in a much stronger position to become part of mainstream healthcare systems around the world.
Recognition opened the door.
The next step is making sure patients can actually walk through it.