Your career is part of who you are — not a footnote. Learn what to highlight, what to skip, and how to sound confident on your marriage biodata.
Vague career lines raise doubts. Long salary talk feels boastful before the first meeting. Families want clarity — not a full résumé on WhatsApp.
Two or three strong education and work lines usually beat a corporate biography. The right balance helps families see you honestly — without misreading ambition.
Start with your highest degree and field. Add college name if your community expects it. One clean line families can verify builds trust fast.
Job title, employer, or practice type — short and factual. Mention city if you work abroad or may relocate after marriage. That prevents early mismatches.
Some families share a package range; others keep income private. Ask your parents first. One rounded range beats exact monthly figures on a forwarded PDF.
Wish to continue teaching after marriage? Say it in one calm line. Families appreciate honesty early — discovering it at engagement causes friction.
No payslips, office IDs, or long certification lists. Skip ultimatums about quitting. One genuine hobby line beats ten copied from the internet.
Fill education and career in the guided form. Preview how work lines sit beside family and photo on your phone — before any relative sees them.
Start the biodata form, add career lines that sound like you, preview your template, and download a print-ready PDF when the page feels honest and calm.