Australia Necrophilia is not explicitly mentioned in Australian law; however, under New South Wales' Crimes Act 1900 – Sect 81C, penalized for misconduct about corpses is any person who:(a) indecently interferes with any dead human body, or (b) improperly interferes with, or offers any indignity to, any dead human body or human remains (whether buried or not), and shall be liable to imprisonment for two years.
Brazil Article 212 of the Brazilian Penal Code (federal Decree-Law No 2.848) states as follows: Art. 212 – To abuse a cadaver or its ashes:Penalty: detention, from 1 to 3 years, plus fine. Although sex with a corpse is not explicitly mentioned, a person who has sex with a corpse may be convicted of a crime under the above Article. The legal asset protected by such an Article is not the corpse's objective honor, but the feeling of good memories, respect, and veneration that living people keep about the deceased person: these persons are considered passive subjects of the corpse's violation.
Germany In Germany, sexual contact with corpses may be regarded as
Leichenschändung (Desecration of corpses), which is prosecutable as
Störung der Totenruhe (Disturbance of the peace of the dead).
Pakistan Until recently, Pakistan had no law that explicitly criminalised necrophilia. Offences involving abuses of dead bodies were prosecuted under general provisions such as Section 297 of the Pakistan Penal Code (PPC), which penalises trespass on burial sites and offering indignity to human corpses when accompanied by intent to wound religious feelings. In September 2024, the Senate Standing Committee on the Interior unanimously approved
the Pakistan Penal Code (Amendment) Bill, 2024—spearheaded by Senator Samina Mumtaz Zehri—which explicitly expanded the scope of
Section 377 (unnatural offences) to include sexual acts involving a deceased body. The amendment now recognises necrophilia as a crime punishable by life imprisonment, aligning Pakistan's legal framework with Islamic principles regarding the sanctity of the dead.
India According to a case in the
Karnataka High Court titled "Rangaraju @Vajapeyi vs State of Karnataka," necrophilia can arise from feelings of anger, curiosity, or lust rather than being driven by sexual necessity or habit. In India, as of now, the
Indian Penal Code (IPC) does not explicitly mention "necrophilia" as a distinct offense under the section that deals with sexual offenses. However, the court's interpretation suggested that it could potentially fall under Section 297, which pertains to causing "indignity to any human corpse" when someone trespasses into a place used for funeral rites or storing the remains of the deceased. Nevertheless, for an act to be considered an offense under Section 297, it must be accompanied by an intention to hurt someone's feelings or insult their religion. Additionally, if it is known that such an act is likely to hurt someone's feelings or insult their religion, it can be punishable under Section 297. In the specific case discussed by the court, it concluded that the elements required under Section 297 were not present. Therefore, the court stated that at most, it could be seen as sadism or necrophilia, but it did not qualify as an offense punishable under Section 376 of the Indian Penal Code. The court further recommended that the government amend the law accordingly.
Philippines There are no laws that explicitly prohibit sexual acts on corpses. The closest applicable law is the provision in the Revised Penal Code which only criminalizes "defamation to blacken the memory of one who is dead". There were efforts to introduce bills criminalizing sexual acts on corpses during the
15th Congress; one by which penalizes sexual acts of males of corpses of women, and another covers sexual intercourse, anal sex, and oral sex done on corpses. Both proposals penalizes the act with fine and imprisonment.
New Zealand Under Section 150 of New Zealand
Crimes Act 1961, it is an offense for there to be "misconduct in respect to human remains". Subsection (b) elaborates that this applies if someone "improperly or indecently interferes with or offers indignity to any dead human body or human remains, whether buried or not". This statute is therefore applicable to sex with corpses and carries a potential two-year prison sentence, although there is no relevant case law.
South Africa Section 14 of the
Criminal Law (Sexual Offences and Related Matters) Amendment Act, 2007 prohibits the commission of a sexual act with a corpse. Until codified by the act it was a
common law offence.
Sweden Section 16, § 10 of the Swedish Penal Code criminalizes necrophilia, but it is not explicitly mentioned. Necrophilia falls under the regulations against abusing a corpse or grave (
Brott mot griftefrid), which carries a maximum sentence of two years in prison. One person has been convicted of necrophilia. He was sentenced to psychiatric care for that and other crimes, including arson.
United Kingdom Sexual penetration of a corpse was made illegal under the
Sexual Offences Act 2003, carrying a maximum sentence of two years imprisonment. Before 2003, necrophilia was not illegal; however, exposing a naked corpse in public was classed as a
public nuisance (
R v. Clark [1883] 15 Cox 171).
United States There is no federal legislation specifically barring sex with a corpse. Multiple states have their own laws: ==Other animals==