India’s cities may be quietly fuelling a health crisis. One in five urban Indians is already showing early signs of cardiovascular risk, while 25% face heightened respiratory vulnerability, according to a new health risk assessment that flags the cumulative toll of modern urban living.
The findings come from CoverRisk, an AI-powered health risk tracking platform by CoverSure, which analysed data from nearly 50,000 individuals across 35 states and union territories over the past six months.
The CoverSure Health Risk Index assigns India’s urban population a composite health risk score of 36.6 on a scale of 0 to 100, with higher scores indicating greater exposure to long-term health risks.
The index draws on a mix of lifestyle and environmental indicators – including air quality, commute duration, BMI, blood pressure, sleep patterns, and sedentary behaviour – to capture how everyday stressors are shaping health outcomes over time.
What makes the assessment particularly striking is its focus on risks that build gradually and often go unnoticed. Poor air quality, long commute hours, sedentary routines, industrial exposure, and underlying physiological factors are combining to create a slow-burning health burden, the report suggests. With healthcare costs rising and advanced treatments becoming more expensive, early risk awareness is increasingly critical for both health and financial planning.
Respiratory risk remains widespread across major cities, driven largely by prolonged exposure to poor air quality and recurring seasonal infections – even among younger populations. At the same time, cardiovascular risk is climbing steadily, linked closely to inactivity, stress, and disrupted sleep cycles.
The data also points to a growing weight problem: 40% of individuals assessed were classified as overweight or obese (BMI >25), increasing susceptibility to conditions such as diabetes and hypertension earlier in life.
Lifestyle patterns appear to be amplifying these risks. Around 67% of respondents reported no regular physical activity, while 55% said they sleep fewer than six hours a night. In metro areas, more than 40% spend over three hours daily commuting, eating into time for exercise and rest.
Among young adults aged 18-25, early warning signs are already visible. About 33% reported smoking between three and ten cigarettes per day. Many in this group are also showing borderline blood pressure, fluctuating cholesterol levels, and early signs of pre-hypertension – suggesting that lifestyle-linked health risks are setting in earlier than expected.
The findings also highlight India’s continued vulnerability to tuberculosis, with 33% of respondents identifying TB among their top perceived health risks, in line with global data that places India among the countries with the highest TB burden.
Commenting on the findings, Saurabh Vijayvergia, Founder and CEO of CoverSure, said, “At CoverSure, we have been building consumer-first solutions for greater control over personalised risks, and as we are all growing fastest in the world, our protection doesn’t lag behind. Our engine has been tested in a robust manner with over 50,000 user-generated data points across all age-groups and every single state / UT of India. In reality, our risks are dynamic and evolve with lifestyle, environment, age, and behaviour, but this has largely been ignored in general awareness & definitely in insurance decision-making. When individuals understand how their risk profile changes over time, insurance shifts from a blind renewal to a customized financial safeguard that adapts with life.”
The assessment underscores that health risks are rarely driven by a single factor. Instead, it is the cumulative impact of lifestyle habits, environmental exposure, family history, and behavioural patterns that shapes outcomes over time – making early awareness and intervention increasingly vital.


