Introduction
Let’s be honest: someone in the family will always ask, “Can you send the Word file?” A marriage biodata in Word format lets you share that familiar .docx alongside a neat PDF for WhatsApp. You get the polish of a proper layout, plus the freedom to tweak a line about gotra, job title, or native place after Sunday lunch.
Create Biodata Now
Fill your details here and preview your biodata without leaving the article.
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CreateMyBiodata is a free marriage biodata maker that works in your browser—you fill the fields, see a live preview, then export to Word or PDF when you are happy. No more fighting with random templates from the internet that break the moment you change a font. This guide walks through what this format is, who it helps, and how to fill it without sounding robotic.
What is it?
A Word-format marriage biodata is still a matrimonial profile at heart: your details, family, education, career, and partner preference—just packaged so you can open it in Microsoft Word or Google Docs later. On CreateMyBiodata, you are not typing into a blank page; you are guided through sections that match how Indian families actually read these sheets.
Who should use it?
- Joint families where one person drafts and another edits offline.
- Matchmakers or bureaus who ask for an editable file “for their records.”
- Anyone who wants a PDF for sharing and a Word copy for last-minute text fixes.
🖼️ Preview Section
See how your biodata can look before you commit. Pick a template, add your photo, and scroll the preview—it is the same output you will get when you download.

Try the maker: use the form below to edit online, then hit Download for PDF or Word when you are ready.
📌 Key Features
- Easy to edit — Change text in the browser first; open the Word file only if you need fine control.
- Clean layout — Sections stay easy to scan on a phone—because that is where half your readers will open it.
- Readable “resume-style” facts — If you add job details, plain labels and dates help everyone skim faster (recruiters call that ATS-friendly; for biodata, it just means “less confusion”).
- Print-ready — Margins and type sizes that still look fine when someone prints a copy for a relative.
Download Options
- PDF — Best for WhatsApp and “final” forwards; formatting stays locked.
- Word (DOCX) — Best when a parent or sibling wants to edit wording or spacing offline.
- Before you send: read phone numbers and names one more time out loud—it catches awkward typos.
🧠 When to use this format
Reach for Word + PDF when you know there will be more than one round of edits, or when someone insists on owning the file locally. If you only ever share on chat and nobody edits, PDF alone is enough.
✍️ How to fill this format
- Facts first — Name, DOB, height if needed, city, education, job—match what you would say in person.
- Family — Parents and siblings in short lines; add one optional cultural line if your community expects it.
- Partner preference — Concrete but respectful; avoid a laundry list of demands.
- Photo — Recent, well-lit, face clearly visible.
- Proofread — Especially district names, university names, and “lakhs vs. lacs” style consistency.
📊 Example filled biodata (sample only)
Fictional example—replace with your real details.
- Name: Ananya Sharma
- DOB: 14 August 1996
- Height: 5′ 4″
- Education: M.Com, University of Mumbai
- Occupation: Accountant, private firm
- Father: Rajesh Sharma, business
- Mother: Meera Sharma, homemaker
- Siblings: One brother, software engineer
- Partner preference: Well-educated, Mumbai-based, vegetarian family
Key takeaways
- CreateMyBiodata = fill online → preview → DOCX or PDF — no blank Word doc from scratch.
- Use PDF for WhatsApp; Word when your family edits offline.
- Proofread names, numbers, and place names once aloud before the first forward.
Frequently asked questions
Can I download marriage biodata as Word for free?
Yes. CreateMyBiodata lets you complete your biodata online and export DOCX or PDF so you can still edit in Word if your family prefers.
Is PDF or Word better for WhatsApp?
Use PDF for sharing so formatting stays fixed; use Word when someone needs to change text offline.