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42,000 bodies in Japan unclaimed in FY 2023 as more elderly live solo
MAINICHI
| April 6, 2025
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TOKYO (Kyodo) -- Approximately 42,000 bodies went unclaimed in Japan in fiscal 2023 and were subsequently cremated or buried by local authorities, a recent government estimate showed, amid a rise in elderly people who live alone without family support.
The first study of its kind, commissioned by the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare, also showed most municipalities did not have an established protocol for dealing with the bodies, including how long they should be kept before cremation.
Of the roughly 1,160 municipalities surveyed by the Japan Research Institute, only 11.3 percent said they had a procedure while 43.5 percent said they did not. Others answered that although they did not have their own rules, they referred to practices elsewhere.
Municipalities have also struggled with concerns that relatives may try to claim bodies after they have been cremated.
The 41,969 unclaimed bodies, both identified and unidentified, made up 2.7 percent of all deaths in the 2023 calendar year, and the need for a system for handling them is growing with the number only expected to rise in coming years.
The National Institute of Population and Social Security Research forecasts 23.3 million out of 52.6 million households, or 44.3 percent, will be single-person households by 2050.
Among municipalities with a system for handling them, Yokosuka, near Tokyo, launched in 2015 a program in which the city assists in contracts between funeral homes and the low-income elderly with no dependents.
Under the program, the city will check on their well-being and contact necessary people and institutions in the event of their death.
"The number of cases in which there are no families to take care of funerals will continue to increase," said Kazuyuki Kitami, a welfare officer in the city. "It is important for municipalities to create systems that will value a resident's dignity and intentions."
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