
Why are boys in Pakistan dropping out of school?
January 15, 2026


Cousin marriages in Pakistan: what the data really shows
This chart breaks down marriage relationships by province and by rural–urban divide—and a few patterns stand out clearly:
🔹 First cousins dominate
Across provinces, marriages to first cousins (father’s or mother’s side) form the majority. In several regions, they account for well over two-thirds of all marriages.
🔹 Father’s side slightly more common
Marriages to a father’s-side cousin are marginally more frequent than those on the mother’s side—suggesting lineage, inheritance, and family structure still matter in marital choices.
🔹 Urban vs rural: surprisingly similar
Urban and rural Pakistan look remarkably alike:
• Father’s-side cousin: ~45%
• Mother’s-side cousin: ~33%
• Second cousin: ~13%
• Other relations: ~9–10%
Urbanisation alone has not fundamentally shifted marriage patterns.
🔹 Provincial variation exists—but tradition holds
While levels vary by province, the underlying preference for close-kin marriage remains strong nationwide.
📌 Why this matters
Cousin marriage isn’t just a cultural issue—it connects to public health, genetic risk, women’s autonomy, and intergenerational mobility. Any serious conversation on social change in Pakistan must be grounded in such evidence, not assumptions.
Data-driven conversations > anecdotal debates.
Gallup Pakistan Digital Analytics we are making complex data sets into sound bites and stories so data becomes accessible and understandable to every one .