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Chinese buy flats for cremated ashes due to high cemetery costs, leading to law against practice

Emerging laying-to-rest trend offers families financial flexibility; critics raise concerns over ‘psychological discomfort’, property values

2-MIN READ2-MIN ListenYating Yangin BeijingPublished: 2:00pm, 5 Apr 2026As Chinese cemeteries become increasingly expensive many people are buying flats to store the ashes of their loved ones, triggering a discussion which has divided public opinion.

Chinese families have long placed great importance on burial practices, with securing a respectable grave regarded as an essential act of filial piety.

However, as rapid urban development limits available land and an ageing population drives up demand, burial space has become increasingly scarce, giving rise to exorbitantly priced graves.

For instance, as of July 2025, Shanghai had just over 54 commercial cemeteries, many of which are already close to being sold out.

In March 2023, Shanghai Songhe Cemetery went viral online after their price was revealed to have reached around 760,000 yuan (US$110,000) per square metre.

At the time, the average housing price in Shanghai was about 55,000 yuan per square metre, according to several online property platforms.

As traditional cemetery plots become increasingly unaffordable, people have begun seeking alternatives, with some choosing to buy residential flats to store ashes as a more practical option.

Read original at South China Morning Post

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