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China Bans 'Bone-Ash Apartments' for Cremated Remains

Is China's funeral reform a bold fix for predatory pricing or a ban that ignores the real cost crisis?
China Bans 'Bone-Ash Apartments' for Cremated Remains
Above: People tend to graves during the Qingming Festival at a public cemetery in Shanghai, China on April 4. Image credit: Johannes Eisele/AFP/Getty Images

The Spin

Government-critical narrative

China's ban on "bone-ash apartments" ignores the real problem — funeral costs are the second-highest in the world,, and cemetery plots only carry 20-year leases while apartments hold 70-year rights. Families aren't being morbid; they're being practical in a broken system. Banning the symptom without fixing sky-high burial costs will just push grieving families underground.

Pro-government narrative

China's sweeping funeral reform is exactly the kind of bold policy overhaul that puts people over profit — mandatory price transparency, non-profit state-run facilities and subsidized eco-burials make dignified end-of-life care accessible to every family. The two-tiered basic and non-basic service system kills predatory pricing at the source. Affordable, regulated funeral services make the bone-ash apartment workaround completely unnecessary.

Metaculus Prediction


Establishment split

CRITICAL

PRO



© 2026 Improve the News Foundation. All rights reserved.Version 6.18.0

© 2026 Improve the News Foundation.

All rights reserved.

Version 6.18.0