Updated
Updated · Financial Times · Jul 11
Young Chinese Flock to Temples in 2026 as Economic Strain Fuels Spiritual Solace
Updated
Updated · Financial Times · Jul 11

Young Chinese Flock to Temples in 2026 as Economic Strain Fuels Spiritual Solace

1 articles · Updated · Financial Times · Jul 11

Summary

  • 18-year-old visitors and other young Chinese are driving a boom in temple visits, turning Buddhist and Daoist sites into a thriving “temple economy” centered on prayer rather than formal religious identity.
  • Free tickets at Hangzhou’s 4th-century Lingyin Temple now require advance booking, underscoring demand as young visitors seek relief from unemployment, social pressure and a more uncertain national trajectory.
  • 20-year-old student Mike Li and 23-year-old IT worker He described prayer as practical and emotional, with many saying they are not formally Buddhist even as they kneel, burn incense and redeem vows.
  • 1976 and a 1982 reform helped reopen space for religion after Mao-era suppression, while later temple renovations and official support for tradition as cultural heritage rebuilt sites such as Lingyin’s hall of 500 arhats.
  • That revival points to a broader shift in China: temples are serving not just as tourist draws but as rare spaces where younger people can place anxieties without the pressures of constant competition.

Insights

As China's youth 'lie flat' from job anxiety, why are they spending billions on a new 'spiritual economy'?
Why does Beijing promote temple visits for youth while jailing pastors for independent worship?