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China bans entombing cremated remains in empty flats

By AFP
April 01, 2026
Chinese families can be seen at the graves of their loved ones. —AFP/File
Chinese families can be seen at the graves of their loved ones. —AFP/File

BEIJING: Chinese authorities have banned entombing cremated remains in empty apartments, a practice that had gained popularity as mourners took advantage of the subdued housing market to dodge rising funeral costs.

“Bone-ash apartments” are units in often barely occupied residential complexes used by some families as resting places for their loved ones´ remains.

They can be cheaper than a public cemetery plot, according to local media, as well as giving families more control over the site.

Acquiring one “kills two birds with one stone”, Carsten Herrmann-Pillath from Germany´s Erfurt University told AFP.

“It´s an investment and eases the (process of carrying out) ritual practices.”

But regulations that came into force on Monday explicitly ban “the use of residential dwellings specifically for the interment of ashes”.

Bone-ash apartments are often identifiable by sealed-off windows or closed curtains, according to Chinese media reports.

A resident quoted by the Communist Party-run Legal Daily newspaper described peeking inside an apartment in his estate to see two candlesticks around a black box and a black-and-white portrait, a typical arrangement in China for commemorating the dead.

The ban comes days before the Qingming Festival, also known as Tomb Sweeping Day, when families traditionally visit relatives´ graves to tidy them and make ritual offerings.