"New data reveals a growing shift among Gen Z: marriage and having children are no longer seen as essential to a fulfilling life. Here’s what’s driving the trend—and what it means for the future"
For much of modern history, marriage and parenthood were seen as the cornerstones of a meaningful life. For Generation Z, that assumption is beginning to fracture.
A growing body of research suggests that young adults in the United States are rethinking long-held expectations about family, commitment and fulfillment. According to recent findings from the Barna Group, roughly three in four members of Gen Z say they can live a fully satisfying life without having children — a higher share than any previous generation.
At the same time, belief in the necessity of marriage appears to be softening. Only about two-thirds of respondents said marriage is important for creating a stable home for children, marking one of the lowest levels recorded in recent surveys.
The data, drawn from a 2024 study of more than 3,500 American adults, reflects a broader cultural shift already visible across multiple institutions. Researchers note a steady decline in support for traditional definitions of marriage, alongside a sharp drop in religious affiliation among younger Americans.
Yet the story is not one of outright rejection. A large majority of Gen Z respondents still say they value marriage, and many express a desire to marry eventually. What has changed is the timeline — and the urgency.
Economic pressures loom large. Rising housing costs, student debt and an increasingly uncertain job market have made financial stability harder to achieve in early adulthood. For many, delaying marriage is less a statement of ideology than a practical decision.
There is also a more subtle shift underway: a heightened awareness of mental health. Young adults today are more likely to speak openly about anxiety, emotional readiness and the risks of entering relationships prematurely. For some, witnessing divorce or family conflict during childhood has made them wary of repeating the same patterns.
The trend is not confined to the United States. In Indonesia, official statistics show a sharp decline in annual marriages over the past decade, falling from more than two million to roughly 1.47 million in 2024. Surveys of Indonesian youth echo similar sentiments, with many saying marriage is no longer a primary life goal.
Instead, priorities are shifting. Studies from the Pew Research Center indicate that only a small share of young adults now consider marriage or parenthood “very important” to a fulfilling life. Meaningful work, personal growth and strong friendships are increasingly taking precedence.
For demographers, the implications are significant. Declining marriage rates often coincide with lower birth rates, accelerating population aging and placing new strains on social support systems.
Still, the shift may also signal a more deliberate approach to relationships. Rather than following inherited norms, Gen Z appears to be redefining commitment on its own terms — weighing emotional, financial and personal readiness more carefully than generations before.
Marriage, once treated as a default milestone, is becoming something else entirely: a choice, not an inevitability. []
Editor: OYR
Get our latest news through:
Share Article
Congregation Conversation
Comments
0 comments are displayed.
Write a Comment
Please provide your name and email address. Guest comments must be reviewed by a moderator before they appear.