Marriage Biodata Format for Boy - Free Templates
A good marriage biodata for a boy does one thing well - it gives a family everything they need to decide if they want to know more. Pick a free template, fill in your details, and download it as a PDF or Word file. No account needed.
Create Your BiodataFree Marriage Biodata Templates for Boys
Traditional and modern designs for Hindu, Jain, Gujarati, Marathi, Muslim, Sikh, and Christian families. All free to use. Browse the full template gallery to see every available design.
Biodata by Community
The format and sections that families expect can vary by community. We have dedicated biodata formats for the most common ones.
What Goes Into a Boy's Marriage Biodata
A boy's biodata and a girl's biodata carry the same sections, but families tend to read them with different priorities. Profession, stability, and family background are usually the first things they look at on a boy's profile. Here is what each section should cover.
Personal details
Full name, date of birth, age, height, complexion, religion, caste, and mother tongue. If your community uses gotra or nakshatra - particularly in Hindu, Jain, and some Marathi or Gujarati families - include those here. Keep it factual. This is the first section most families read.
Profession and income
Your current job title, employer, and the city you work in. For a boy's biodata, this section carries more weight than almost anything else. Be specific - "software engineer at Infosys, Pune" is more reassuring than "IT professional." Annual income is optional, but including a range tends to reduce back-and-forth with families early on. If you want to present this section especially well, the professional biodata format has a layout designed for it.
Education
Your highest qualification and the institution you attended. If you hold a postgraduate degree or professional certification that is relevant to your field, mention it. Keep it to two or three lines - this is a summary, not a resume.
Family background
Father's name and occupation, mother's name and occupation, siblings with their names and marital status, and the family's native place. Some families also note whether they are a joint family or nuclear family - that can matter to the other side. Write this section with the same care you would want the girl's family to write theirs.
A photograph
Use a recent photo - taken within the last year. A plain or neutral background works best. Formal or semi-formal attire is the norm for a boy's biodata photo. Avoid casual selfies or group photos. Profiles with a clear, professional-looking photo get significantly more responses.
Partner preferences
Be honest about what you are looking for, but keep the tone respectful. Preferred age range, education level, and location are reasonable to mention. Very long or demanding preference lists tend to put families off before they have even finished reading.
Not sure what a filled-in biodata looks like? See a sample marriage biodata to get a sense of how the sections come together on the page.
How to Create Your Marriage Biodata
Start by clicking any template above. The maker opens and walks you through each section in order - personal details first, then profession, family, and partner preferences. You will not miss anything important because the form prompts you through it.
Have your details ready before you start. The whole thing takes about five minutes if your information is at hand. The section that trips most people up is family background - knowing your parents' occupations and your siblings' current status before you open the form saves time.
Once you have filled in everything, upload your photo and preview the result. Check the contact number carefully - that one mistake gets missed more often than any other. When you are satisfied, download as a PDF for sharing on WhatsApp or email, or as a Word file if you want to keep an editable version. Both formats are free.
If you are helping a family member create a biodata for a girl, the marriage biodata for girls has templates and layout better suited for that.
Questions People Usually Ask
Should I include my salary in the biodata?
It is optional, but including an income range often reduces the number of early conversations that do not go anywhere. If you are not comfortable with the exact figure, a range works fine. Many boys leave it out and follow up when asked directly.
Do I need to mention gotra or nakshatra?
It depends on your community. For most Hindu, Jain, and some Marathi and Gujarati families, yes - these are checked early and it saves time to include them upfront. For communities where they are not relevant, you can leave those fields blank.
PDF or Word - which should I download?
PDF for almost everything - it looks the same on any device and is easier to share and print. Download the Word version only if someone specifically asks for an editable file, or if you plan to update it regularly.
Is this free? Are there hidden charges?
Completely free. No account, no subscription, no charge for downloading. Some sites show you a free preview and charge for the actual file - we do not do that. Create and download as many times as you need.
Can I update the biodata later?
Yes. Come back any time, pick the same template, fill in the updated details, and download a fresh copy. There is no saved version on our end - your previous data is not stored, so you will need to fill it in again from scratch. Takes about three minutes once you know the flow.
Which template is right for a boy's biodata?
There is no single right answer - it depends on your community and what feels appropriate. Cleaner, less decorative designs are generally better received for boys. The blue and minimal templates in the gallery tend to work well across most communities. Browse the full template gallery to compare.
Your biodata is ready to be made
Pick a template, fill in your details, and download free - PDF or Word, your choice.
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