#1

#2

If a man can’t respect that a woman has a whole identity outside of him, he’s not marriage material. Because he fails to see women as people and instead sees them as property.
#3

1. My husband didn’t get the PhD I did, my name stays
2. It’s the last thing I have left of my dad who passed when I was 16
3. My last name is cooler 😂
And….my husband doesn’t care because he loves me for far more than just a last name
Gender equality has come a long way over the past few decades and in many countries, women now have more freedom to make their own choices. But somehow, the tradition of women taking their husband’s last name is still going strong.
According to a 2025 survey in the US, about 69% of married women say they took their partner’s last name after they got married, while 29% kept the last name they were born with.
Past research findings do show that there is now a positive uptick in the number of women keeping their own name, especially among younger generations.
In the 2010s, roughly 22% of women kept their birth name after marriage, compared with under 15% before the 1970s.
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#6

A man changing his name? That’s a rare sight.
A 2025 survey of Americans shows less than 1% changed their surname after marriage. Of these, some took their wife’s family name, some hyphenated, and some invented entirely new surnames.
This shows that surname practices are deeply rooted in traditional gender roles. Many people don’t even consider asking a man to change his name because it isn’t viewed as a social expectation.
In some cultures, it was, and still is, believed that women “belong” first to their fathers, then to their husbands.
A recent study found that men who do adopt their wife’s surname are sometimes seen as having less power in the relationship.
#7

#8

By law, women keep their birth name after marriage.
It’s simply a legal difference, not a reflection of love or commitment.
For them a marriage is built on unity, not paperwork.
#9

Socially, I'll be Mrs. [Husband's name] to everyone we meet. But, PLEASE don't make me do the paperwork.
Haley Metzger, a millennial from Colorado, went viral on TikTok recently after speaking out against the tradition of women taking their husband’s last names.
She explained that the practice goes back to a time when women were seen as their husbands’ property.
“Pretty ugly origins for a tradition that most people are still upholding,” she said in the video.
“Obviously people have their own reasons for why they want to have the same name as their partner. You want your kids to have the same name as both of their parents, or it's romantic to have the same name. But if those were really the reasons then why don't we see more men taking their wives' name?” she questioned.
She pointed out that some men seem to treat taking a woman’s last name as if it were humiliating, which says a lot about how they view women taking their name.
#10

#11

1. It is illegal in my country to change my name to my husband's.
2. I was a person already when I met him.
3. I have awesome parents, which have given me a solid foundation for my future. Their name is mine forever.
4. We are a marriage, equal partners for everything except in the risks taken in order to form a family. So my surname went first and he knew it would be like that since we became serious.
5. My husband is strong enough to accept a strong woman.
#12

Even before a woman decides whether to change her last name, marriage already shifts how the world sees her. Suddenly, her title becomes “Mrs,” to prove she’s now someone’s wife.
Add a surname change on top of that, and it’s like rewriting her whole official identity.
In today’s digital age, all the work, connections, or achievements under your maiden name can vanish online if you suddenly change it.
All your documents need updating whether it’s your passport, driver’s license, bank accounts, or professional profiles.
It’s not just annoying, it can cost you time and even career opportunities.
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#15

Long story short, my last name means a LOT to me. It's not just a name. It's held up against multiple regimes, immigration, and if I ever complete my PhD
Your names are not mere words on a paper — it’s your identity, it tells people who you are and how you fit into the world.
When society assumes a woman will take her husband’s name, it isn’t a neutral choice, it shapes how she sees herself.
If your name is treated as temporary, or as something you give away, it can make you feel less independent.
Instead of being simply yourself, you can end up being “someone’s wife,” “someone’s mother,” or “someone’s daughter.”
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#18

I’m also old enough to remember that all my mother’s credit cards were in my father’s name. She marveled when I got one in my own name. You don’t let go of that.
For women, even today the decision isn’t purely personal. Family expectations, religion, kids, and career all play a role.
And given the social judgment of a misogynistic culture, it’s no wonder why some women would decide that a name change is the path of least resistance.
Recent surveys show Americans are far more likely to have a positive view of a woman taking her spouse’s last name (58%) than of a man taking his spouse’s last name (20%).
#19

If one day someone said, your last name is now O’Connell, forget your old one, that’s who you are. You’d be cool?
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