🎉 Use coupon code GO90 and get 90% OFF on all plans!
Logo

Vivah Swapn

arranged marriagemarriage advicepre-marriagerelationship tips

50 Questions to Ask Before an Arranged Marriage

A comprehensive guide to the most important questions every couple should discuss before saying yes — covering values, family, finances, health, and future plans.

calendar_month 31 May 2026 person Vivah Swapn Team schedule 8 min read

Marriage is one of the most significant decisions you will ever make. In an arranged marriage, where families take the lead in introductions, both partners often have limited time to understand each other before committing. Asking the right questions early prevents misunderstandings and builds a relationship rooted in honesty and mutual respect.

This guide organises 50 essential questions into eight key areas — values, lifestyle, family, finances, children, health, communication, and marriage expectations — so no important topic is left unspoken before you say "हो" (yes).


1. Personal Values & Character

These questions reveal the foundation your partner has built their life on.

1. What are the three values you will never compromise on? Listen for honesty, family, or faith — and notice whether those values align with yours.

2. How do you handle conflict or disagreement with someone close to you? Do they talk it out, withdraw, or escalate? This is a preview of how arguments in marriage will go.

3. What does loyalty mean to you in a marriage? Loyalty looks different to different people — financial decisions, emotional boundaries, social circles.

4. Are you religious or spiritual? How important is daily practice to you? Pujas, fasting, pilgrimages — if one partner is deeply observant and the other is not, this needs open discussion.

5. How do you feel about blending tradition with a modern lifestyle? Can you wear jeans to a family function? Can your wife keep her surname? These small things matter.

6. What does success mean to you — career, family, inner peace, wealth? A mismatch here can cause decades of friction if one partner defines success differently from the other.

7. Do you believe in gender roles in a marriage? Who cooks? Who earns? Who decides? It is better to surface expectations now than to assume.


2. Lifestyle & Daily Habits

Everyday habits are where love is tested most often — not in grand moments, but in small ones.

8. Are you a morning person or a night person? How flexible are you? Two different sleep schedules under one roof need some negotiation.

9. Do you drink alcohol or smoke? Are you comfortable if your partner does? Be honest. This affects health, social life, and sometimes religious sensibilities.

10. What is your diet — vegetarian or non-vegetarian? Is it a dealbreaker? In many Maharashtrian families this is non-negotiable. Know where you stand.

11. How important are festivals, family gatherings, and cultural celebrations to you? Some people find energy in large gatherings; others find them exhausting. Compatibility here matters.

12. Do you prefer living in a city, a smaller town, or closer to a village? Especially relevant if one family is in Pune and the other is in a rural district.

13. What does your ideal weekend look like? Travel, family time, rest at home, socialising with friends? There is no wrong answer — but mismatch leads to frustration.

14. What are your personal hobbies and interests? Shared interests build friendship inside marriage. Different interests just need mutual respect.


3. Family Expectations

In arranged marriages, you are not just marrying a person — you are joining a family.

15. Will we live with your parents, separately, or is there flexibility? This single question changes everything. Discuss it clearly, without pressure.

16. How is your relationship with your family currently? A person who speaks about family with love and reasonable boundaries is usually easier to navigate with.

17. What are your parents' expectations from the person you marry? Know this before the wedding, not after.

18. How often do you visit family and expect your partner to be present for all visits? Weekly dinners, festival stays, annual holidays — what is the expectation?

19. How would you handle conflict between your spouse and your parents? This is one of the most common sources of strain in marriages. A thoughtful answer here is a green flag.

20. What role do you expect in-laws to play in your household decisions? From where to live to what car to buy — who has the final say?

21. Are there any family responsibilities — financial or otherwise — I should know about? Elderly parents who need care, a sibling's education being funded, joint property — these are fair things to discuss.


4. Career & Financial Situation

Money is among the top causes of marital stress. Transparency is kindness here.

22. Are you currently working? What does your career path look like in five years? Ambition and stability look very different. Know which one your partner values.

23. Do you expect your spouse to work after marriage? And if yes — after children arrive? Be specific.

24. How do you handle money — saving, investing, or spending freely? A spender and a saver under one roof need a clear system.

25. Would we manage finances jointly or separately? Joint accounts, separate accounts, or a mix — there is no single right answer.

26. What are your financial goals for the next ten years? A home, children's education, early retirement, travel — do your visions overlap?

27. Do you have any existing debts, loans, or financial obligations? A home loan, education loan, or supporting relatives — these affect your joint financial future.

28. Who takes the lead on major financial decisions in your household? Joint decisions or one person steering — what feels right to each of you?


5. Children & Future Planning

This section has no wrong answers — only honest ones.

29. Do you want children? If so, roughly when? A partner who wants children in year one and another who wants to wait five years need to work this out together.

30. How many children do you envision? One, two, more — preferences are shaped by finances, lifestyle, and family pressure.

31. What are your views on parenting — firm structure, gentle guidance, or child-led? Parenting philosophy differences become visible quickly after a child arrives.

32. If both partners work, who takes the primary caregiving role for young children? Hired help, grandparents, career pause — what is realistic and acceptable?

33. How important is it that children be raised with specific religious or cultural values? Language, religion, festivals, diet — what do you want to pass on?

34. What is your view on the child's education — type of school, city, medium of instruction? Marathi medium or English medium? Local school or boarding? Early clarity prevents late conflict.

35. Would you be open to adoption if biological children were not possible? A thoughtful, honest answer reveals character regardless of what it is.


6. Health & Wellbeing

Health topics can feel awkward to raise — but they affect daily life more than almost anything else.

36. Are there any medical conditions I should know about that may affect our life together? Chronic illness, disability, ongoing treatment — these deserve honest disclosure.

37. Does your family have significant hereditary health conditions? Diabetes, heart disease, mental health conditions — relevant for both lifestyle and family planning.

38. How do you take care of your physical health — exercise, diet, sleep? Habits built before marriage tend to continue (or intensify) after it.

39. How do you manage stress and emotional wellbeing? Does your partner internalise stress, talk through it, exercise it away, or seek professional support?

40. Are you open to couples counselling if we hit a difficult period? In India this still carries stigma. A partner who says yes to support when needed is showing maturity.


7. Communication & Compatibility

The quality of your communication will define the quality of your marriage.

41. How do you prefer to resolve arguments — talk it through immediately or take space first? Neither is wrong, but a mismatch needs a shared agreement.

42. How much personal space and alone time do you need within a relationship? Introversion and extroversion differences are real and manageable — but only if acknowledged.

43. What is your love language? Words of affirmation, acts of service, quality time, physical touch, or gifts — knowing this helps both partners feel loved.

44. Do you prefer to keep problems between the two of you, or do you consult family? When things get hard, who is in the room — just the couple, or the whole family?

45. What are your expectations around day-to-day communication? Multiple calls, good morning messages, or giving each other space during work hours — what feels right?


8. Marriage Expectations & the Wedding

Practical questions that reveal a lot about values and family dynamics.

46. Do you have a preferred timeline for the wedding? Expectations around how soon after engagement the wedding should happen vary widely.

47. What kind of wedding do you want — large celebration, small gathering, or simple registration? A grand Maharashtrian wedding or an intimate ceremony — and who is making that call?

48. Who takes the lead in wedding planning — families or the couple? Some families plan everything; others leave it entirely to the couple. Know before you start.

49. What are your thoughts on dowry, gifts, and wedding expenses? This is sensitive but essential. Expectations around this have ended engagements and strained new marriages.

50. What does a happy marriage look like to you twenty years from now? This is the most important question on this list. Listen carefully. The answer tells you everything about what your partner is building toward.


How to Use This List

Do not treat these as an interrogation checklist. Use them as conversation starters across several meetings. Notice not just the answers but how the person answers — with openness, defensiveness, thoughtfulness, or dismissiveness.

A partner who says "I haven't thought about that, let me think" is often more trustworthy than one who has a perfect rehearsed answer for every question.

Take your time. The most important decision of your life deserves more than one or two conversations.

Trust your instincts — and trust the process. A good marriage is built on honest foundations, and those foundations are laid in the conversations you have before the wedding, not after.

favorite

Ready to find your life partner?

Join thousands of verified Marathi and Maratha profiles on Vivah Swapn.

Start Your Free Search arrow_forward