Advertisement

Relief for foreigners amid China’s public toilets makeover ... but there’s still room to improve

‘The quality of public toilets has gotten so much cleaner and people’s etiquette has gotten better too,’ a South Korean visitor commented after a trip to China

Reading Time:5 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
President Xi Jinping has ordered China to clean up its notoriously dirty and foul-smelling public bathrooms in a bid to improve quality of life and boost tourism. Pictured: newly built toilets at a park in Anlong County in China's southwestern Guizhou province. Photo: AFP
Mandy Zuoin Shanghai

From its economic prowess to its technological advances, signs of China’s progress in recent decades are easy to find. But for foreign visitors, one of the most telling indications of the country’s advancement is the improving condition of its public toilets. 

Advertisement

Kay Park, a South Korean who lived in Beijing for more than 10 years, said that when she first visited China as a tourist 15 years ago, its public toilets were “a disaster”. 

“There were no doors at some toilets,” she recalled in an interview. “Or people wouldn’t close the doors.” 

Things had improved noticeably during a recent trip back to China, she said.

“The quality of public toilets has gotten so much cleaner and people’s etiquette has gotten better too,” Park said. 

Across the mainland, more than 70,000 public toilets have been constructed or repaired since 2015, when President Xi Jinping ordered a “toilet revolution”. 

Advertisement
Advertisement