
The Chinese government is set to ban people from storing the cremated remains of their loved ones in empty apartments instead of paying for expensive cemetery plots.
The new law will put an end to "bone ash apartments", which have risen in popularity as spaces in cemeteries remain scarce.
Low property prices in the country mean that for many, it is more affordable to entomb the ashes of relatives in an empty apartment than pay for funeral costs.
The legislation prohibits the use of residential properties "specifically for the placement of ashes" as well as the burial of remains outside of cemeteries and areas where ecological burial is legal.
Bone ash apartments are empty properties which are turned into ritual halls by family members of the deceased. Their loved one's ashes are placed inside and the space turned into an ancestral shrine.
The apartments are often identifiable by closed curtains or sealed-off windows, Chinese media has reported.
Mourners are making the most of low property prices, which have fallen in China in recent years and were down 40% in 2025 from 2021.
Meanwhile, cemetery spaces are limited and only come with a temporary lease which must be renewed every 20 years.
The price for a burial plot in Beijing's Changping Tianshou Cemetery ranges from around 10,000 yuan (£1,095) to 200,000 yuan (£21,917), according to its website. The cheaper options are "eco-friendly burial plots".
A standard tombstone plot starts at about 150,000 yuan (£16,400), with prices rising to 300,000 yuan (£32,841), which the website notes is "relatively high" in Beijing.
The price of funerals is also high. In 2020, funerals cost nearly half of the country's average annual salary, according to a survey by British insurance firm SunLife.
On social media, commentators have pointed out the cost of cemetery plots and queried how the new law will be regulated. One person wrote on Weibo, China's equivalent of X: "Who would resort to this if cemetery plots were affordable?"
Another said: "How will those enforcing these rules know if the apartments are being used just to store ashes? And how will they deal with those cases?"
The ban comes days before the Qingming Festival, also known as Tomb Sweeping Day, where people tidy the graves of loved ones and make ritual offerings.
On Tuesday, the State Administration for Market Regulation and the Ministry of Civil Affairs laid out new requirements for the funeral industry following concerns over high costs.
It said it would introduce new rules to tackle fraud and a lack of transparency in funeral pricing to "reduce the burden of funerals on the masses".
LATEST POSTS
- 1
From Representative to Business visionary: Private issue Victories - 2
RFK Jr.’s vaccine advisers plan biggest change yet to childhood schedule - 3
Geminid meteor shower 2025 peaks next week. Here's what you need to know about this year's best meteor shower - 4
Miley Cyrus details her fear of paper, says fiancé Maxx Morando opens their packages outside: 'That's really why I got engaged' - 5
Behind every perfect holiday memory is a mom on the brink
German economic institutes cut forecast in half over Iran war
Polish law aimed at lowering petrol prices takes effect on Tuesday
Bombardier Global 8000 Enters Service
Shas threatens to oppose 2026 state budget over haredi food-voucher exclusion
Iran War Derails The Automotive Industry
Shelby County deputies charged with assault, placed on leave
Claim that Israel opened 'sewage dam' into Gaza's main river undersells sanitation crisis
3 Italian City Cars That Outsmarted Regulations and Rivals
Astrophotographer captures rare footage of the Hubble Telescope crossing the sun (video)











