China’s Wedding Boom: Nightclubs, Mountains and a Demographic Reset
Record uptick in unions follows sweeping reforms allowing couples to marry anywhere and in unconventional venues
China is witnessing a striking resurgence in wedding registrations, driven by newly relaxed regulations that allow couples to wed anywhere in the country and in creative venues such as nightclubs, snow-capped mountains and subway stations.
In the first three quarters of 2025 some 5.2 million marriages were recorded—an increase of about 405,000 from the same period the previous year—marking a modest but notable reversal of the decade-long decline.
Earlier this year authorities abolished the requirement that couples must register their marriage in their home province (hukou), opening up possibilities for destination weddings across the country.
Local governments have responded by setting up on-site registration booths at music festivals, historic temples, ski-resorts and even dance clubs.
In Shanghai a six-storey nightclub complex has been repurposed to host both ceremonies and receptions, with civil-affairs staff stationed inside to issue certificates in real time.
Regional officials say the move forms part of a broader demographic strategy: China’s birth rate is falling, the number of young adults eligible for marriage is shrinking, and the ageing population poses a threat to long-term economic growth.
Marriage is seen by Beijing as a precursor to child-bearing and an important lever for tackling population decline.
Despite the rising numbers, experts caution against premature celebration.
Analysts note that whilst registrations have grown year-on-year—rising by 22.5 per cent in the third quarter alone—the underlying challenge remains the diminishing cohort of young adults and persistent financial pressures such as high housing and childcare costs.
Some demographers continue to project that the population of women aged twenty to thirty-four will nearly halve by 2050.
For now, however, wedding planners and tourist officials alike are seizing the moment.
Sayram Lake in Xinjiang, for instance, has become a “destination-registry” site thanks to its symbolic numbers—2073 metres above sea level (suggesting “love you deeply”) and a lake surface area of 1,314 km² (phonetically akin to “a lifetime”).
Couples say the reform made marriage far more convenient: a lawyer and a bank employee in Beijing told reporters they no longer needed to travel back to their hometown to register and could treat the ceremony as part of a weekend getaway instead.
In short, China’s new policy framework is giving marriage a fresh cultural and behavioural push—measured not only in numbers but also in experience.
How sustained the trend will prove remains uncertain, but for the moment the wedding bells are ringing louder than they have in years.