But there's a catch: her new apartment is in a coal town near the Russian border where winter temperatures plummet well below zero, nearly 4,000 kilometres (2,500 miles) from her glitzy home city.
Fang, 29, is part of a wave of young Chinese choosing to invest in dirt-cheap real estate in declining and remote industrial regions, ditching China's modern, expensive metropolises.
In major cities, "unless you're a child of the super-elite, I don't see how young people can ever earn enough for a house", the brand management professional told AFP.
Fang's main residence is in southern Guangzhou, where she lives with her husband and two children, but the apartment is owned by the couple's parents.
Flats there routinely sell for over 100,000 yuan ($14,000) per square metre, beyond the means of many middle-class residents, she said.
But last winter, a road trip took Fang to Hegang, a hardscrabble mining settlement in China's frigid northeast.
There, entire properties sell for a fraction of the going rate down south.
Fang and her husband ended up paying just 40,000 yuan ($43,000) on the spot for an entire top-floor apartment with a covered balcony and expansive hill views.
They plan to renovate it into a retreat from Guangzhou's stifling summers.
"I was incredibly surprised. I never expected to be able to get a house for so little money, even if you built it yourself," Fang said.
- Shrinking cities -
China's hinterland is scattered with hundreds of industrial cities long past their heyday.
Towns like Hegang have endured decades of population loss since the 1980s, as market reforms shifted the economic centre of gravity towards the increasingly affluent eastern and southern coast.
Hegang shed over 15 percent of its population between 2010 and 2020, according to official figures.
But now these shrinking cities are seeing a surge in interest from young buyers seeking alternatives to the urban rat race, drawn by easily affordable housing and a growing reputation for low-cost, carefree living.
One young homeowner who bought a 68,000-yuan flat in Gejiu -- a fading mining city in southern Yunnan province -- told AFP they had done so "mainly to 'lie flat'".
The phrase refers to a burgeoning dropout culture that pushes back against China's intense and often burnout-inducing study and work pressure.
The country's Communist Party leadership has criticised "lying flat" as a rejection of the values of hard work and innovation, and encouraged young people to strive for the good of the nation.
The homeowner, who requested anonymity, said they "hadn't even thought about working" since relocating to Gejiu.
"I'll stay here, live off the little money I have, and find temporary work in a big city when I run out," they said.
- Fading prospects -
During an AFP visit to Hegang this month, roadside sellers hawked fresh fruit, vegetables and snacks for the equivalent of a few US cents each.
Bathed in mild sunshine, clusters of retirees played cards outside on their porches.
"There's something spiritual about (Hegang's) slower pace," said newly minted homeowner Kathy Cao, 28.
"In (wealthier) cities... you might just talk work or business all day," said Cao, who previously resided in the cities of Xi'an and Zhengzhou.
"But people here don't do that so much, because your chances of earning big money are fairly slim anyway."
A formerly prosperous town, Hegang has recently struggled to pay mounting municipal debts, and the government stepped in with an unprecedented fiscal "restructuring" in 2021.
The move has helped to avert a catastrophic bankruptcy, but money remains tight, and cheap housing alone is unlikely to reverse Hegang's fortunes.
The city frequently fails to pay wages to public sector workers on time, a local administrator told AFP.
Shen Wenxin, a Hegang native who recently returned to open a cafe, said: "The more people who come here, the better".
"But they only account for a fraction of the economy."
"Our low house prices are all well and good, but what should our mainstream economy rely on?"
Other locals contacted by AFP said they were sceptical about the city's ability to rejuvenate itself.
Max Chu moved to Beijing for university and now works there -- with no plans to return.
"After a while, this trend won't be so popular anymore," she predicted.
"People's memories of it will fade."
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