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Biodata Format for Marriage for Boy — Samples & Free Templates (2026)

April 8, 202614 min read

Biodata Format for Marriage for Boy — Samples & Free Templates (2026)

If you are making a biodata for a boy, you already know the stakes. The boy's biodata is often the first thing a girl's family evaluates — and they are looking for very specific signals. Career stability, family values, lifestyle, and whether this person is genuinely ready for marriage.

This guide gives you everything you need: what families actually look for in a boy's biodata, three complete sample biodatas for different professional backgrounds, how to present career and income without sounding like a resume, photo tips, and the most common mistakes boys make.

What Families Look for in a Boy's Biodata

Before writing a single word, understand what the other family is scanning for. Their priorities — whether they say it explicitly or not — usually follow this order.

1. Career Stability

This is the single biggest factor. Not the salary number, not the company name — but whether the boy has a stable, clear career trajectory. A family wants to know their daughter will be financially secure. "Software Engineer at a tech company in Pune, 4 years of experience" communicates stability. "Working in IT" does not.

2. Family Background

Parents want to understand the family they are potentially joining. Father's and mother's occupations, siblings and their status (married/unmarried, working/studying), and the general family environment all matter. A family that feels grounded and values-driven is what most families are looking for.

3. Education

Degrees matter, but not in the way most people think. Families are not comparing GPAs. They want to see that the boy is educated, that the institutions are recognizable, and that the education aligns with the career. A B.Tech from a decent college followed by a software engineering career makes sense. A B.Tech followed by "exploring options" raises questions.

4. Lifestyle and Values

Diet (vegetarian/non-vegetarian), drinking habits, religious observance, and general lifestyle preferences. These are compatibility filters. A family that is strictly vegetarian will filter out non-vegetarian candidates early — it is not personal, it is practical.

5. Readiness for Marriage

This is the unspoken filter. Is this boy actually ready, or is this biodata being circulated because his parents want him to be ready? Signals of readiness include financial independence, a settled living situation, and expectations that sound like they came from the boy himself rather than being copied from a template.

Sample Biodata 1: IT Professional

Personal Details

FieldDetails
NameArjun Mehta
Date of Birth15 March 1997 (Age 29)
Height5'10" (178 cm)
ReligionHindu
CasteBrahmin
Mother TongueHindi
ManglikNo
Current LocationBangalore, Karnataka

Education

DegreeInstitutionYear
B.Tech (Computer Science)NIT Surathkal2019
Class XII (CBSE)DPS, Jaipur2015

Career

Senior Software Engineer at a leading product-based tech company in Bangalore. 5+ years of experience in the technology industry. Hybrid work setup (office 3 days a week). Financially independent with stable savings.

Family Details

RelationDetails
FatherRajesh Mehta, Retired Bank Manager (SBI)
MotherSunita Mehta, Homemaker
BrotherYounger, pursuing MBA at IIM Lucknow

About Me

I enjoy my work but make sure it does not consume my entire life. Weekends are for family, cooking experiments, and the occasional trek. I am an early riser, prefer a calm lifestyle, and value honesty and open communication above everything else.

Lifestyle

Vegetarian. Non-smoker. Occasional social drinker. Interests include reading, cooking, and hiking.

Partner Expectations

Looking for someone who is educated, kind, and has her own interests and ambitions. Prefer a working professional, but open to both. Someone who values family but also has an independent streak. Age preference: 25-29. Open to any caste within Hindu families.

Contact

Father: Rajesh Mehta — [phone number]

Sample Biodata 2: Doctor

Personal Details

FieldDetails
NameDr. Karan Desai
Date of Birth8 July 1995 (Age 30)
Height5'11" (180 cm)
ReligionHindu
CastePatel
Mother TongueGujarati
Current LocationAhmedabad, Gujarat

Education

DegreeInstitutionYear
MD (General Medicine)B.J. Medical College, Ahmedabad2025
MBBSGujarat University2020

Career

Consultant Physician at a reputed private hospital in Ahmedabad. Completed MD residency in 2025. Currently establishing a private practice alongside hospital work. Standard hospital hours with on-call duties twice a week.

Family Details

RelationDetails
FatherDr. Nitin Desai, General Practitioner (own clinic)
MotherMeena Desai, retired school teacher
SisterElder, married, dentist in Mumbai

About Me

Medicine runs in the family, but it is not my only conversation topic. I enjoy playing cricket on weekends, am a decent cook (Gujarati food specifically), and make it a point to travel at least twice a year. I believe in a balanced life — work hard during the week, switch off on Sundays.

Lifestyle

Pure vegetarian. Non-smoker. Non-drinker. Regular at the gym.

Partner Expectations

Looking for someone educated, family-oriented, and understanding of a doctor's schedule. A medical background is welcome but not required. Prefer someone based in Gujarat or open to relocating to Ahmedabad. Age preference: 25-29.

Contact

Mother: Meena Desai — [phone number]

Sample Biodata 3: Business Family

Personal Details

FieldDetails
NameRohit Agarwal
Date of Birth22 November 1996 (Age 29)
Height5'9" (175 cm)
ReligionHindu
CasteMarwari
Mother TongueHindi
Current LocationIndore, Madhya Pradesh

Education

DegreeInstitutionYear
MBA (Finance)Symbiosis, Pune2021
B.Com (Hons)St. Xavier's College, Kolkata2018

Career

Managing the family's textile manufacturing business in Indore alongside my father. The business has been running for 25+ years. My role involves operations management, client relations, and expanding the business to new markets. Standard working hours, no travel requirements.

Family Details

RelationDetails
FatherSuresh Agarwal, Businessman (Textile Manufacturing)
MotherKavita Agarwal, Homemaker, active in community social work
SisterElder, married, based in Jaipur
BrotherYounger, studying B.Com in Indore

About Me

I grew up watching my father build the business from a small shop to what it is today, and I take pride in carrying that forward. Outside of work, I enjoy playing badminton, following the stock market, and spending time with family. I am close to my parents and believe in joint family values.

Lifestyle

Vegetarian (Jain family). Non-smoker. Non-drinker. Morning gym routine.

Partner Expectations

Looking for someone who is cultured, family-oriented, and comfortable with a joint family setup. Education is important — graduate or postgraduate preferred. Prefer someone from a similar business or professional family background. Willing to support her career if she wishes to work. Age preference: 23-28.

Contact

Father: Suresh Agarwal — [phone number]

How to Present Career Without Sounding Like a Resume

The career section is where most boys' biodatas go wrong. They either write too much (turning it into a LinkedIn summary) or too little (just a job title with no context).

Here is what works:

Include:

  • Your role and industry in plain language
  • Company type (MNC, startup, government, family business) — you do not need to name the company
  • Years of experience or tenure
  • Work location and setup (office, hybrid, remote)
  • One line about financial independence or stability

Skip:

  • Technical jargon (no one cares about your tech stack)
  • Project descriptions and KPIs
  • Certifications and course lists
  • Anything you would put on LinkedIn but not tell your mother

The family reading your biodata wants to understand your professional life in terms that matter for marriage: Is he settled? Can he support a family? Will he be home for dinner? That is it.

For a deeper guide on this, read: Biodata for Working Professionals: How to Present Your Career Without Sounding Like a Resume

Income in a Boy's Biodata: Range vs Exact

This is the question every boy (or his parents) wrestles with. Should you mention income? If yes, how?

Option 1: Do not mention a number at all. Instead, signal financial stability. "Financially independent, well-settled" or "Own apartment in Bangalore, stable savings." This works well for most situations and avoids reducing you to a salary figure.

Option 2: Mention a range. If you feel the number adds context (especially for high-earning professionals), use a range: "Annual income: 15-20 LPA" or "CTC in the range of 25-30 LPA." A range feels less transactional than an exact number.

Option 3: Exact CTC. Some families expect this, especially in more traditional setups. If your parents insist, include it — but know that it invites direct comparison with other biodatas, and that is not always in your favor even if the number is high.

Our recommendation: Option 1 for most people. Let the career description, company type, and stability signals do the talking. If a family wants to know the exact number, they will ask during initial conversations — and that is a more natural context for it.

Photo Tips for Boys

Photos in a boy's biodata carry more weight than most boys realize. Here is what works and what does not.

Do:

  • Use a recent photo (within the last 6 months)
  • Wear a clean, well-fitted formal or smart casual outfit
  • Choose a clean background — solid wall, outdoor greenery, or a simple indoor setting
  • Make sure your face is clearly visible and well-lit
  • Smile naturally — a stiff passport-style photo feels cold
  • Include one full-length photo and one close-up

Do not:

  • Use gym selfies or shirtless photos (this is not a dating app)
  • Use heavily filtered or edited photos
  • Use group photos cropped to show just you
  • Use photos with sunglasses or hats that hide your face
  • Use photos that are more than a year old
  • Use photos in front of cars or bikes to show off

The goal is to look approachable, well-groomed, and genuine. Families want to see the person they might be welcoming into their home — not an Instagram version of you.

Common Mistakes Boys Make in Their Biodata

After reviewing thousands of biodatas, these are the patterns that hurt boys' chances the most.

1. Career-heavy, personality-light

The biodata reads like a job application. Three paragraphs about work, one line about hobbies ("reading, traveling, music"). The family learns what you do but not who you are.

2. Parents clearly wrote it

"Our son is a well-mannered, God-fearing boy who respects elders." This is a dead giveaway. It is fine for parents to help, but the biodata should sound like it represents you — not like a parent's description of you at a family gathering.

3. Vague expectations

"Looking for a beautiful, educated, homely girl from a good family." This tells the other family nothing specific. What does "good family" mean? What education level? Working or non-working? Be specific so families can self-select — it saves everyone time.

4. No About Me section

Many boys skip this entirely, thinking the facts speak for themselves. They do not. The About Me section is your chance to show personality. Two to three lines about your interests, values, and what you enjoy outside of work makes a real difference.

5. Outdated or no photo

A biodata without a photo gets skipped more often than you think. And an old photo creates a bad first impression when the families eventually meet. Use a recent, genuine photo.

6. Copy-pasted from a template

"I am a simple, down-to-earth person who values family" appears in about 60% of biodatas. If your About Me section could belong to anyone, rewrite it with something specific to you.

For a complete list, read: Common Biodata Mistakes (and How to Fix Them)

Create Your Biodata with ShareLync

If you have read this far, you know what a good boy's biodata should look like. Now you need to actually create one — and that is where most people get stuck.

ShareLync makes it simple.

AI-powered PDF import. Already have a biodata your parents made in Word? Upload the PDF. ShareLync's AI reads it, extracts every field, and fills everything in. You review, pick a theme, and you are done. No retyping.

Professional themes. Your biodata should not look like a Word document from 2015. ShareLync's themes are clean, modern, and designed to look polished on any phone screen.

A link, not a PDF. Share your biodata as a live link. Got promoted? Changed your expectations? Edit in the app — everyone with your link sees the updated version. No re-sending PDFs on WhatsApp.

Privacy built in. Your biodata is encrypted with AES-256 encryption. Not public, not searchable. Only people with your specific link can see it. Contact details, income information, family details — all protected.

Organize received biodatas too. When biodatas start coming in for your match, organize them in the app. Shortlist, compare side by side, and send private inquiries — all in one place.

Create your biodata in 5 minutes

End-to-end encrypted. Update anytime. Delete from everywhere with one tap.

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FAQ

What should a boy's biodata for marriage include?

A boy's biodata should include personal details (name, date of birth, height, religion, caste), education, career details (role, company type, location, work setup), family details (parents' occupations, siblings), an About Me section, lifestyle preferences, partner expectations, and contact information. The career section should emphasize stability and lifestyle rather than technical achievements.

How do I write income in a marriage biodata for boy?

You have three options: signal financial stability without a number ("financially independent, well-settled"), mention a salary range ("15-20 LPA"), or state the exact CTC. For most situations, signaling stability through your career description and lifestyle is more effective than stating a number.

What is the best biodata format for boy in 2026?

The best format follows this order: Personal Details, Education, Career, Family Details, About Me, Lifestyle, Partner Expectations, and Contact. Keep the career section to 3-4 lines focusing on role, company type, location, and work-life balance. Use a clean, modern template rather than a Word document.

Should a boy mention salary in biodata?

It is not necessary and often not recommended. Stating an exact salary invites comparison and reduces you to a number. Instead, indicate financial independence through your career description and stability signals. If a family wants the exact number, they will ask during conversations.

What photos should a boy include in marriage biodata?

Include one close-up and one full-length photo. Wear formal or smart casual clothing. Choose a clean background with good lighting. Smile naturally. Avoid gym photos, heavily filtered images, group photos, and anything older than 6 months.

How long should a boy's marriage biodata be?

One to two pages is ideal. Cover all essential sections without padding. If your biodata is longer than two pages, you are including too much detail — likely in the career or family sections. Keep it concise and let conversations fill in the rest.

What are common mistakes in a boy's biodata?

The most common mistakes are: writing a career-heavy biodata with no personality, letting parents write it entirely (it sounds like a third-person description), vague partner expectations, no About Me section, outdated photos, and copy-pasting generic descriptions from templates.

ShareLync is a free biodata creation and sharing app available on Android and iOS. Create a polished biodata, share it as a live link, organize received biodatas, and shortlist matches — all with AES-256 encryption. Your biodata, your link, your control.

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