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Home US & CANADA

China bans storing cremated remains in empty 'bone ash apartments'

by Ella Kipling
March 31, 2026
in US & CANADA
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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China bans storing cremated remains in empty 'bone ash apartments'

Empty high-rise properties known as 'bone ash apartments' have become popular places for Chinese mourners to store ashes. Pictured is a file photo of flats in China.

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Regulatory Analysis: The Proliferation and Subsequent Prohibition of Residential Columbariums in China

The funeral and interment industry in mainland China has reached a critical inflection point as the Ministry of Civil Affairs initiates a sweeping crackdown on the phenomenon known as “bone ash apartments” (guhuifang). This unconventional practice involves the purchase of residential real estate for the sole purpose of storing the cremated remains of deceased relatives, rather than for human habitation. As urban land scarcity drives cemetery prices to astronomical levels,often exceeding the price per square meter of luxury housing,middle-class families have pivoted to the residential market to secure a permanent resting place for the departed. This report examines the economic catalysts behind this trend, the legal framework of the government’s prohibition, and the broader implications for the Chinese real estate and funeral sectors.

I. Socio-Economic Drivers: The Market Displacement of Traditional Burial

The emergence of bone ash apartments is primarily a rational economic response to a hyper-inflated death care market. In tier-one cities such as Beijing and Shanghai, a standard cemetery plot can command prices ranging from 200,000 to over 500,000 RMB, often with a mandatory “management fee” renewal every 20 years. In contrast, residential properties in satellite cities or industrial outskirts can be acquired for a similar or lower price point, offering a 70-year land-use right. This disparity has created a “grave slave” crisis, mirroring the “mortgage slave” phenomenon that has defined Chinese urban life for decades.

From a financial management perspective, the bone ash apartment offers several advantages to the consumer. Beyond the extended tenure of the lease, these units provide a private, climate-controlled environment for ancestral worship, free from the overcrowding and seasonal restrictions of public cemeteries. Families often choose units in “ghost cities” or underdeveloped residential compounds where vacancy rates are high and property management is lax. This arbitrage,substituting regulated funeral land for residential land,represents a significant leakage in the state-controlled funeral economy and highlights a systemic failure to provide affordable interment options for an aging population.

II. Legal Framework and the Enforcement of Land-Use Sanctity

The Chinese government’s decision to ban the use of residential units for storing remains is rooted in the Regulations on Funeral and Interment Management and the Civil Code of the People’s Republic of China. Under these statutes, land is strictly zoned for specific purposes. Residential land is designated for “living” (zhuzhai), and repurposing these spaces into columbariums is viewed as a violation of the intended land-use rights. Authorities have emphasized that such practices disturb the social order and contravene the “public interest” and “public order and good morals” (gongxu liangsu) clauses essential to Chinese civil law.

Enforcement involves a multi-agency approach. Local housing bureaus and civil affairs departments are now empowered to conduct inspections based on neighbor complaints or unusual utility patterns (such as units with consistently zero water usage but periodic visitor spikes during the Qingming Festival). The ban mandates that residential properties must remain habitable and that the storage of human remains in a manner that mimics a funeral facility is a punishable offense. Property management companies are also being held liable for failing to report “atypical use” of units, effectively turning community managers into the first line of regulatory defense against the commercialization of residential remains storage.

III. Market Friction and the Devaluation of Residential Capital

The “bone ash apartment” trend has introduced significant negative externalities into the real estate market. The primary concern is the “neighborhood effect,” where the discovery of a columbarium unit within a standard apartment block leads to an immediate and sharp decline in the property value of adjacent units. In Chinese culture, proximity to death is often viewed as inauspicious, and the psychological burden on residents living next to a room filled with urns has led to numerous legal disputes and physical altercations.

For institutional investors and developers, this phenomenon represents a new category of risk. The presence of these units can render an entire floor or building “unsellable” in the secondary market. Consequently, the government ban is seen by many in the real estate sector as a necessary intervention to protect the integrity of residential assets. However, the ban also exposes the desperation of the populace. Without a corresponding increase in the supply of affordable, dignified burial plots or a cultural shift toward “green burials” (such as sea scatterings or tree burials), the demand for “bone ash apartments” is likely to move further underground rather than dissipate entirely.

Concluding Analysis: Structural Challenges in an Aging Society

The prohibition of “bone ash apartments” is a reactionary measure that addresses the symptoms rather than the root cause of China’s funeral crisis. While the state is justified in maintaining zoning integrity and protecting the psychological well-being of residential communities, the economic pressure driving this trend remains unaddressed. As China’s mortality rate is projected to rise alongside its aging demographic, the tension between land conservation and traditional filial obligations will intensify.

In the long term, the Chinese government must reconcile its land-use policies with the logistical realities of death. This may require a liberalization of the funeral market, the development of multi-story “vertical cemeteries” in urban centers, or aggressive subsidies for ecological burial methods. Until the cost of a legitimate burial plot is brought in line with the average citizen’s purchasing power, the regulatory “cat-and-mouse” game between grieving families and housing authorities will persist. The ban on bone ash apartments serves as a temporary reprieve for the real estate market, but it underscores a deeper, unresolved societal conflict regarding the spatial and financial costs of honoring the dead in a land-scarce economy.

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