NRI Marriage Biodata Format: Complete Guide with Examples
Complete NRI marriage biodata format with filled examples for US-based matches. Covers visa status, USD/INR income, settling intentions, and everything Indian families need to know.
An NRI biodata for marriage carries more information than a regular one. Most of the extra weight is context. Where do you live? What is your visa situation? Are you coming back to India? Can you sponsor a visa if needed? Indian families ask these questions immediately, so your NRI marriage biodata format should answer them before anyone has to ask.
This guide walks through what to include, section by section, with complete filled examples for both a male and a female. Both examples are US-based, which is the most searched scenario.
What makes an NRI biodata different
A standard biodata covers name, education, job, and family. An NRI biodata needs five additional things that a domestic biodata never addresses:
- Country and city of residence:Not just “USA” but Seattle, WA or London, UK. City matters because it signals lifestyle, time zone, and whether a visit is feasible.
- Visa or immigration status: H1B, L1, OPT, Permanent Resident (Green Card), or Citizen. Each carries different implications for job stability, relocation flexibility, and spouse visa processing time.
- Visit frequency to India: How often you come back. Once a year? Twice? This is a practical concern for both families and the prospective match.
- Settling intentions: Whether you plan to stay abroad long-term, return to India in a defined timeline, or are open to either. This is the single most important thing to state clearly in your NRI biodata for marriage.
- Income in foreign currency with INR equivalent: Indian families often do not know current exchange rates. Writing “$1,40,000/yr (~₹1.16 Cr)” removes the guesswork entirely.
- Property and assets in India and abroad: Mention what is relevant, not everything.
Everything else follows the same structure as a regular biodata.
Section-by-section breakdown
Personal Details
Include the standard fields: name, date of birth, height, and complexion. Add your current city and country too. If you are in the US, mention the state as well. Religion and caste go here if your family follows community-based matching.
Example: “Currently based in Seattle, Washington, USA. Originally from Mumbai.”
Educational Background
List degrees with institution names and graduation years. Foreign degrees often need brief context. For example, “M.S. Computer Science, University of Illinois (2018)” clearly signals a US master's degree. If you attended a lesser-known school abroad, the field of study matters more than the institution name to most Indian families.
Example: “B.Tech - VJTI Mumbai (2016) | M.S. Computer Science - University of Illinois (2018)”
Professional Details
This section needs two NRI-specific additions: visa status and income in foreign currency with an INR equivalent. Keep visa status factual. Something like “H1B visa, sponsored by Amazon, valid till 2027” or “Permanent Resident (Green Card)” is enough. For income, write the annual figure in the local currency and add the INR number in parentheses.
Example: “Senior Software Engineer, Amazon Web Services | H1B visa (valid 2027) | Annual income: $1,45,000 (~₹1.2 Cr)”
Family Details
Mention parents and siblings with occupation and location. Families want to know if your parents are in India or also abroad. This affects how accessible your family is and how a wedding would logistically work.
Example: "Father: Rajesh Mehta, Retired (Ex-BPCL) - Mumbai. Mother: Sunita Mehta, Homemaker - Mumbai. Younger sister, married, Pune."
Partner Preferences
This section is where NRI biodatas go vague most often. Be specific on three things: are you open to India-based matches, will you support visa or relocation if needed, and where do you expect the couple to settle. Families need to know if their son or daughter would be leaving India.
Example: “Open to matches from India or abroad. Happy to support visa and relocation. Looking to stay in the US for 3-5 years; open to returning to India thereafter.”
Contact
Always include an India-based contact. A parent's mobile number and city is the safest option. Indian families, especially older parents, prefer calling a number they recognise. Add your own WhatsApp or email as a secondary contact for the prospective match.
Example: “Contact: Rajesh Mehta (Father) - Mumbai | +91-98XXXXXXXX”
NRI biodata example - Male (US-based)
Fictional but realistic. All NRI-specific fields are included. This example covers H1B status, the most common scenario for Indian men working in the US.
॥ श्री गणेशाय नमः ॥
About Me
Living in Seattle for the past four years, working in cloud infrastructure at Amazon. I love weekend hikes and make passable South Indian food. Very close to my family in Mumbai. We video call almost every week. Looking for someone grounded, curious, and genuinely family-oriented.
Personal Details
Education
Professional Details
Family Details
Settling Intentions
Planning to stay in the US for the next 3-5 years. Open to returning to India if the right opportunity comes up. GC process expected to begin in the next year.
Partner Preferences
Contact
NRI biodata example - Female (US-based)
This example uses a Green Card holder. It is a different profile from H1B but common among NRI women in tech and management roles.
॥ श्री गणेशाय नमः ॥
About Me
San Jose has been home for three years and I genuinely love it. The weather helps. I work in product at Microsoft and find it meaningful. Outside work, I am an avid reader, an occasional baker, and still learning to salsa. Very close to my parents in Delhi. Looking for someone ambitious but who knows when to switch off.
Personal Details
Education
Professional Details
Family Details
Settling Intentions
Strongly prefer to continue in the US. I have built my career here and hold a Green Card. Open to matches already in North America or genuinely considering a move. Not planning to relocate to India in the near term.
Partner Preferences
Contact
Common mistakes in NRI biodatas
Not mentioning visa status clearly
Writing “working in the US” without specifying H1B, PR, or citizenship leaves families confused about job security and spouse visa timelines. Be specific. One line is enough.
Vague about settling intentions
“Open to anything” sounds flexible but causes the most mismatch. If a family is looking for someone to settle in India and you are not returning, this wastes both sides' time and comes out painfully late.
No India-based contact
Many NRI biodatas only list an email or a foreign WhatsApp number. Indian families, especially older parents, prefer calling a +91 number. Always include a parent's mobile in India.
Overly corporate tone in the About Me
An About Me that reads like a LinkedIn summary (“results-driven professional with 6+ years of experience...”) sounds cold. Write how you would talk to a new acquaintance at a family gathering.
Dos and don'ts
Do
- Mention your city and country, not just the country name
- Write income in both foreign currency and approximate INR equivalent
- State your visa status clearly: H1B, PR, citizen, or OPT
- Be direct about whether you are open to India-based matches
- Say whether you will sponsor a spouse visa or support relocation
- Use a parent's Indian mobile number as the primary contact
- Mention how often you visit India
- Keep the biodata to one page if possible
Don't
- Say “settled abroad” without specifying country and city
- Write only “work visa” without specifying the type
- Be vague about settling plans. Saying “open to both India and abroad” means nothing to a family making a decision
- Skip income entirely. It creates unnecessary guesswork
- Write an About Me that sounds like a resume objective
- Only list a foreign phone number or email as the sole contact
- Include horoscope details unless your family specifically needs it
Quick answers
Should I mention my salary in USD or INR?
Both. Write the USD figure and add the INR equivalent in parentheses. Indian families often do not know the current exchange rate, so the INR number helps them contextualise it immediately.
Do I need a different template for PR vs H1B?
No, the template is the same. Just fill the visa field correctly. Use “Permanent Resident (Green Card)” or “H1B visa, employer-sponsored, valid till [year].” That one line carries a lot of weight for families assessing stability.
Should I mention if I'm open to settling in India?
Always. This is the question that comes up first in every NRI matrimonial conversation. If you are not planning to return, say so honestly. Hiding it surfaces painfully late in the process.
Do NRI biodatas need a horoscope section?
Only if your community requires it. If unsure, add one line: “Kundali details available on request.” That covers both cases without cluttering the biodata.
Can my parents in India handle the contact?
Yes, and it is preferred. Indian families feel more comfortable reaching a parent in India first. Add your own email or WhatsApp as a secondary contact so the prospective match can reach you directly.
Create your NRI biodata on MatriProfile
Pick a template, fill in your details including NRI-specific fields like visa status and income in foreign currency, and download a clean PDF in minutes. No login required to start.
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