Is the Pattern of Marriage in Indian Society Changing? A UPSC Anthropology Analysis
⏱ 10 min read | ~2155 words
“Is the institution of marriage in India changing?” — This question, or some version of it, has become one of the most contextually rich topics in UPSC Anthropology Paper 1. It connects traditional anthropological concepts to present-day social realities, and that’s exactly why examiners love it. If you can answer this well, you demonstrate not just knowledge but genuine analytical thinking.
Let’s walk through this topic thoroughly — the changes, the causes, and the new institutions emerging at the edges of traditional marriage.
The Traditional Foundation
Traditionally, marriage in India was a sacred institution — not merely a civil or personal arrangement but a religious duty. In Hindu society, marriage was tied to the concept of “dharma” — performing one’s sacred duties. It was arranged entirely by parents, solemnized through religious ritual, and seen as permanent.
The key features of traditional Indian marriage were:
– Caste endogamy (must marry within one’s caste)
– Gotra exogamy (must not marry within the same gotra)
– Parental selection of the spouse — the bride and groom had no say
– Religious ceremony as the defining ritual
– Marriage as a family affair, not an individual choice
– High stability — divorce was nearly nonexistent
– Child marriage common, especially in rural areas
These features have been undergoing profound transformation. Let’s examine each dimension of change.
7 Major Changes in Indian Marriage Patterns
1. Change in the Form of Marriage
Traditional Hindu society, though centered on monogamy as the ideal, actually had significant practice of polygamy, polyandry, bigamy, and exchange marriages across various communities. These practices have sharply declined.
Today, monogamy is the overwhelmingly dominant form of marriage in Indian society — both due to legal sanctions (the Hindu Marriage Act, 1955 prohibits polygamy for Hindus) and cultural shift. Communities that once practiced other forms have largely transitioned to monogamy.
2. Change in the Purpose of Marriage
Traditional Hindu marriage was about performing sacred duties — becoming kins, protectors, and perpetuators of lineage. The primary purpose was dharmic, not romantic.
Today, with the influence of mass media, consumerism, and globalization, the sacred nature of marriage is increasingly supplemented — or replaced — by personal, romantic, and economic motivations. Love, compatibility, and personal fulfillment have become central expectations from marriage in urban India. This shift represents a fundamental transformation in what marriage is for.
3. Change in the Process of Mate Selection
This is perhaps the most visible change. In earlier times, parents selected spouses, and the bride had virtually no voice. Sons had somewhat more say, but the decision was a family affair.
Today, increasing education — especially among women — urbanization, and economic independence have dramatically changed this dynamic. Children are now routinely consulted in marriage decisions. In many urban households, the boy and girl talk and get to know each other before the wedding. The matchmaking process, once handled entirely by family networks and middlemen, has been replaced by matchmaking agencies, newspaper matrimonials, and social networking sites (Jones, 2010). Matrimonial apps and websites are now a dominant part of urban mate selection.
4. Change in the Age at Marriage
Traditionally in India, marriages occurred at a very young age — sometimes in childhood. Female education, urbanization, awareness campaigns, and legal changes (The Prohibition of Child Marriage Act) have dramatically altered this.
Now, longer periods of professional education delay marriage. Studies show that marriages are now commonly delayed to the 25-30 age range, particularly for educated urban populations. This has had a significant impact on population growth: delayed marriage is closely linked to lower fertility rates, as the reproductive window narrows.
5. Declining Stability of Marriage — Rising Divorce Rates
This is one of the most striking changes. In the past, divorce was almost unheard of. The fear of social ostracism, strong family pressure, and tight kinship codes kept marriages together — whether or not the partners were happy.
Today, legislation, education, and greater individual awareness have changed this completely. Divorce rates are rising across India. In agro-based states like Punjab and Haryana, divorce rates have increased by 150% over the last decade. In Kerala, known as India’s most literate state, the increase is even more dramatic — divorce rates have risen by 350% in the last decade.
The reasons have shifted as well. Allen and Grow (2001) noted that love, personal commitment, and intrinsic satisfaction are now seen as the cornerstone of marriage — and when these are absent, marriage is more likely to end.
6. Increase in Intercaste Marriages
Until recently, marrying outside one’s caste was both socially prohibited and practically rare. Today, this is changing.
Kapadia (1982) conducted a landmark study on intercaste marriages in India and found that more than 50% of parents expressed willingness to allow their children to marry outside their own caste. Only one-third were strictly against it.
7. Change in the Economic Dimension of Marriage
In the past, the marriage ceremony was a family affair — held at home, with a limited budget but a large guest list. Today, particularly in cities, marriage has transformed into a grand social spectacle.
The ‘big fat Indian wedding’ — with lavish venues, elaborate decoration, multi-day events, and expensive food — has become the norm in urban and semi-urban India. Marriage is now as much a social performance as a personal milestone. This transformation reflects broader changes in consumption culture and conspicuous display of wealth.
Factors Driving These Changes
Five major categories of factors explain why Indian marriage is changing:
Emerging New Institutions
Besides the changes in traditional marriage patterns, entirely new institutional forms are emerging at the margins — mostly in metropolitan cities.
In western countries, live-in relationships have long been given legal rights equivalent to marriage in many jurisdictions. In India, the Supreme Court has given legal recognition to live-in relationships, but social acceptance remains limited. The key question in anthropology is whether a live-in relationship counts as “marriage” — and the answer depends on social recognition, not just legal recognition.
Live-in Relationships vs Marriage: The Anthropological Debate
At the heart of these changes lies a fundamental question: Can live-in relationships replace marriage?
The answer, from an anthropological standpoint, is nuanced. Marriage as a social institution carries emotional commitment, legal protection, and social recognition that live-in relationships do not fully replicate. The emotional investment in marriage — the loyalty, fidelity, and staying power it incentivizes — gives it a unique social function.
As the traditional view concludes: though marriages have their ups and downs, no relationship currently enjoys the same level of social, legal, and emotional recognition as marriage. New institutions like live-in relationships are transitory — they are often a stage before marriage, not a replacement for it.
Conclusion: Change, but Not Collapse
The institution of marriage in India is changing — there is no question about that. The age of marriage is rising. Divorce rates are climbing. Intercaste marriages are increasing. New institutions are emerging. The purpose of marriage has shifted from the sacred-collective to the personal-romantic.
But marriage has not collapsed. It remains universally practiced. As anthropological observation confirms: men and women are still emotionally invested in their marriages. The institution has adapted, not died. The changes represent the collision between tradition and modernity — and how that collision is resolved will define Indian society for the next generation.
📌 UPSC Previous Year Questions
- Q: Where do you situate ‘live-in relationship’ within the institution of marriage? (15 Marks, 2013)
- Q: Discuss the role of marriage regulations in traditional societies in India for strengthening social solidarity. (20 Marks, 2023)
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
A: Marriage in India is changing in form (monogamy replacing polygamy), purpose (from sacred to romantic), age (rising to 25-30), stability (rising divorce rates), caste selection (increasing intercaste marriages), and economic dimension (lavish weddings). New institutions like live-in relationships and DINK couples are also emerging.
A: DINK stands for Double Income, No Kids. It refers to couples who are both working and have consciously chosen not to have children, often for lifestyle or financial reasons.
A: Anthropologically, whether a live-in relationship is considered marriage depends on social recognition, not legal status. In most Indian societies, live-in relationships do not yet receive the same social recognition as formal marriage.
A: The main factors are economic (women’s employment and education), social (breakdown of joint family, rise of individualism), psychological (individual fulfillment ethos), technological (mobile, social media), and legislative (Hindu Marriage Act, Special Marriage Act, domestic violence laws).

