- →"Lower your standards" confuses two different things: your real non-negotiables (deen, character, honesty, core compatibility) and your superficial preferences (a specific height, income, or look).
- →Never lower the bar on the non-negotiables that make a marriage work, wanting those isn't pickiness.
- →Do loosen the cosmetic checklist, which screens out wonderful, compatible people for reasons that won't matter in ten years.
- →Keep a short, firm non-negotiables list and a long, flexible preferences list.
"You need to lower your standards." It's one of the most common, and most confusing, pieces of marriage advice. Sometimes it's wise. Sometimes it's terrible. The reason it's confusing is that "standards" lumps together two completely different things: your real non-negotiables and your superficial preferences. Sort those out, and the advice finally makes sense.
Two kinds of "standards"
- Non-negotiables are the things that genuinely determine whether a marriage will work: deen, character, core compatibility, shared values and life goals. These are not pickiness. They're the whole point of marrying well.
- Preferences are the surface checklist: a specific height, a particular income bracket, a certain look, a precise profession, an exact background. These feel important, but most of them have little to do with whether a marriage thrives.
When someone says "lower your standards", the useful question is always: which kind do they mean?
When "lower your standards" is bad advice
If "lowering your standards" means compromising on deen, character, honesty, or core compatibility, ignore it completely. Wanting a spouse who prays, has good character, and genuinely wants to build a life with you is not being picky, it's marrying for the right reasons. Settling on these out of fear, pressure, or a ticking clock is how people end up in marriages they regret. Never lower the bar on the things that actually make a marriage work.
When "lower your standards" is good advice
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If your list is dominated by superficial preferences, a rigid height requirement, an exact salary, a flawless look, a long checklist of cosmetic must-haves, then yes, loosen those. Not because you don't deserve to be happy, but because that checklist is screening out wonderful, compatible people for reasons that won't matter at all in ten years. The person who would be a brilliant spouse might be two inches shorter or in a different career than you pictured. Holding a cosmetic checklist as if it were sacred is a real way good matches get missed.
The reframe: trade a long checklist for a short non-negotiables list
Here's the shift that helps most. Instead of a long list of preferences treated as requirements, define a short, clear list of true non-negotiables, the handful of things you genuinely cannot build a life without (deen, character, key compatibility) and hold those firmly. Then hold everything else loosely, as preferences that are nice but flexible.
This isn't lowering your standards. It's aiming them at what matters. You become more open on the surface and more uncompromising on the essentials, which is exactly the right way round.
How to tell which is which
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For each thing on your "list", ask honestly: will this still matter in ten years of marriage, or is it about an image? Does this affect whether we can build a good life together, or just whether they match a picture in my head? Deen, character, how they treat people, shared goals, those pass the test. Height, exact income, a specific look, usually don't.
The bottom line
"Lower your standards" is bad advice about your non-negotiables, deen, character, core compatibility, and good advice about your superficial checklist. Don't compromise on what makes a marriage actually work; do let go of the cosmetic must-haves that screen out great people for no real reason. Keep a short, firm non-negotiables list and a long, flexible preferences list, and you'll search both wisely and openly.
Frequently asked questions
Should I lower my standards to get married? It depends entirely on which "standards". Never lower them on the non-negotiables that make a marriage work, deen, character, honesty, core compatibility, wanting those isn't pickiness. But do loosen superficial preferences like an exact height, income, or look, which screen out wonderful, compatible people for reasons that won't matter in ten years.
What are real non-negotiables in a spouse? The things that genuinely determine whether a marriage thrives: deen, good character, honesty, and core compatibility in values and life goals. Keep this list short and hold it firmly. Everything else, the cosmetic checklist, should be held loosely as flexible preferences.
How do I know if I'm being too picky? For each item on your list, ask whether it will still matter after ten years of marriage or is mostly about an image. Things that affect whether you can build a good life together (deen, character, shared goals) are worth holding firm; cosmetic preferences (a specific height, salary, or look) are usually where genuine pickiness, and missed good matches, hide.
Set real non-negotiables and stay open on the rest, that's how you search well. Zawji lets you filter on what actually matters, deen and character first, start a free profile.
From the Seerah
Khadijah och Profeten ﷺ — det första äktenskapet i islam
Khadijah (radiyallahu anha) var en framgångsrik affärskvinna som själv föreslog äktenskap med Profeten ﷺ. Hon skickade sin väninna Nafisah för att sondera terrängen, och sedan gick Profetens ﷺ farbror Abu Talib till hennes familj. Processen var öppen, respektfull och involverade familjen.
Ibn Hisham, as-Seerah an-Nabawiyyah
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Common questions
It depends entirely on which standards. Never lower them on the non-negotiables that make a marriage work, deen, character, honesty, core compatibility, wanting those isn't pickiness. But do loosen superficial preferences like an exact height, income, or look, which screen out wonderful, compatible people for reasons that won't matter in ten years.
The things that genuinely determine whether a marriage thrives: deen, good character, honesty, and core compatibility in values and life goals. Keep this list short and hold it firmly. Everything else, the cosmetic checklist, should be held loosely as flexible preferences.
For each item on your list, ask whether it will still matter after ten years of marriage or is mostly about an image. Things that affect whether you can build a good life together (deen, character, shared goals) are worth holding firm; cosmetic preferences (a specific height, salary, or look) are usually where genuine pickiness, and missed good matches, hide.
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