I cared about getting married, but I waited until I was 34ish-35 years old...
I HIGHLY suggest that if you truly know yourself and you do find that magical person that you want to marry that you seriously have "marriage education"...
Many churches have these kinds of classes... If you can ignore the religious connotations, then the actual classes are pretty good because they teach you on how to argue, fairly rather than explosive arguing...
But secular marriage education classes are on the lines of that from
The Gottman Institute that teaches you how to be in a relationship with somebody else...
Do a "google search" on marriage education/enrichment and you will find that there is a whole subculture out there on improving the quality of lives of couples. The government has an invested interest in this prospect because it releases funds lost when a couple divorces and one spouse becomes destituted--especially along with children...
Divorces do impact the state monetarily... The issue is when couples divorce at no fault (i.e. they are tired of each other--irreconciable differences) there are some courts that will force the couple to go through some level and months of counseling before the divorce decree is signed... That is true with states that have covenant marriage laws.
So at some level, I'd say in the next decade or so, marriages will be rather rare and couples will cease the knowing the logic of being married. And those fancy free and foot loose single at 40 something will be the norm, whereas those who are married with children will be the oddballs... Folks will still be in monagomous relationships, but the legalities will not be there of a maritial relationship. And marriage will be like going and joining a church--something that seriously religious/spiritual folks do...