Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess if you’re from a rich family, it doesn’t matter if you get married and have kids at a young age. Everyone else has student loans to pay, trying to save to buy a house, etc. That takes a long time.
I wouldn’t want my kid to get married that young. Your 20s are for traveling, trying out jobs, etc.
You don’t need to buy a house or pay off loans before you get married. And if you need to be doing all that before you get married then you shouldn’t be throwing your money away “traveling” either. Also, there’s no law that says you can’t travel with your spouse either.
What a bizarre take.
Bizarre? Nope. Only weirdos went to get married that young. The only people I know who were married that young did it because the girl was pregnant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess if you’re from a rich family, it doesn’t matter if you get married and have kids at a young age. Everyone else has student loans to pay, trying to save to buy a house, etc. That takes a long time.
I wouldn’t want my kid to get married that young. Your 20s are for traveling, trying out jobs, etc.
You don’t need to buy a house or pay off loans before you get married. And if you need to be doing all that before you get married then you shouldn’t be throwing your money away “traveling” either. Also, there’s no law that says you can’t travel with your spouse either.
What a bizarre take.
Bizarre? Nope. Only weirdos went to get married that young. The only people I know who were married that young did it because the girl was pregnant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is this happening at an accelerated rate these days? I've been to two weddings of 2025 college grads this summer and all the kids are 21/22. They're headed off to medical school and law school and are the kids of professional parents who married in their early 30s.
My teens say early marriage is all over instagram as well.
Sample size bias or is this a trend?
My niece is 25 and just got engaged. I know she's a little older than the young adults you're talking about but she tells me that she knows many people her age who are getting married and that it's hard to find a meaningful relationship when situationships, ghosting, etc. are the norm. So as much as this generation is known for all those things, they despise it and really crave stable and loving relationships. I saw somewhere that even online dating is down. Also, for financial reasons, some think combining resources as a young couple make sense since everything is so unaffordable these days. I think it's a definite shift from the millennial and Gen X generations for sure. In my generation, most of my friends got married in our 30s and only if we felt like we had climbed enough in our careers to start a family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess if you’re from a rich family, it doesn’t matter if you get married and have kids at a young age. Everyone else has student loans to pay, trying to save to buy a house, etc. That takes a long time.
I wouldn’t want my kid to get married that young. Your 20s are for traveling, trying out jobs, etc.
You don’t need to buy a house or pay off loans before you get married. And if you need to be doing all that before you get married then you shouldn’t be throwing your money away “traveling” either. Also, there’s no law that says you can’t travel with your spouse either.
What a bizarre take.
Anonymous wrote:Is this happening at an accelerated rate these days? I've been to two weddings of 2025 college grads this summer and all the kids are 21/22. They're headed off to medical school and law school and are the kids of professional parents who married in their early 30s.
My teens say early marriage is all over instagram as well.
Sample size bias or is this a trend?
Anonymous wrote:There’s more to it than just finances (although that plays a big role). There could be situations where the people’s school/career situations don’t allow them to live closer to one another or in the same city until they’re a little older. I’ve also known some couples who married young, focused on things like career/travel and didn’t have kids until a decade or so into their marriage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think these kids just don’t know what to do with themselves if they don’t have something to post on Instagram. It’s all for the likes.
You sound like your grandfather.
Anonymous wrote:I think these kids just don’t know what to do with themselves if they don’t have something to post on Instagram. It’s all for the likes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess if you’re from a rich family, it doesn’t matter if you get married and have kids at a young age. Everyone else has student loans to pay, trying to save to buy a house, etc. That takes a long time.
I wouldn’t want my kid to get married that young. Your 20s are for traveling, trying out jobs, etc.
You don’t need to buy a house or pay off loans before you get married. And if you need to be doing all that before you get married then you shouldn’t be throwing your money away “traveling” either. Also, there’s no law that says you can’t travel with your spouse either.
What a bizarre take.
Anonymous wrote:The median age for marriage is the highest on record. 29.2 for men and 28.4 for women.
Marriage rates among the wealthy and educated are higher than for the MC and LMC.
Until the median age starts decreasing it’s just some anecdotes.