Anyone who dies after the deadline will have to be cremated.
Officials smash up coffins to drive the point home.
Dozens of elderly Chinese people have been killing themselves to avoid a looming ban on burials.
The elderly suicides want to make sure their deaths are registered before a June 1 deadline, after which Anhui province authorities will close all cemeteries.
Anyone who dies after that date will have to be cremated because, authorities say, cemeteries are taking up too much space.
In order to drive the message home council officials have been visiting funeral parlours and smashing up coffins.
The draconian move has only hastened the rate of suicide as elderly people rush to guarantee one of the few remaining.
The new rules were published on April 1. Regional officials said: 'Before June 1 people can still consign their bodies for burial, but after that the only option offered will be cremation.'
In urban areas it has meant little change, but in rural areas the idea of cremation is abhorrent to many and there has been extreme opposition.
Local media has reported dozens of cases in which elderly people have killed themselves in order to qualify for a burial.
Zhang Wenying, 81, hanged herself on May 13. She left behind a note saying she had ended it all to make sure she could have a decent death, and she expected to be buried.
Another was 97-year-old Wu Lixiu, who died on May 12.
There have also been deaths in the provincial capital, and in three villages elders recorded at least seven people who have committed suicide to make sure they are buried instead of cremated.
'It's hard for the old people to accept the policy, so the government should give them more time to think about it, but not carry out the policy on such short notice,' said one elder.
Comment: Statistics report China has an aging population with over nine million burials every year. It is running out of space as urban cemeteries are nearing capacity and prices are skyrocketing for burial plots. The term "grave slave" describes a generation that must work hard simply to afford the the burials of themselves, their parents and ongoing cemetery payments.