ABA Model Rule 7.1 is the foundation of attorney advertising ethics, and it governs your website just as it governs billboards or TV ads. The core prohibition is straightforward: no false or misleading communications about a lawyer or the lawyer's services.
Note: This is educational content about bar regulations, not legal advice. Verify current rules with your state bar before implementing any disclaimer strategy.
What makes a communication 'misleading' under 7.1? The rule identifies several triggers:
- Material omissions that create unjustified expectations
- Statements likely to create unjustified expectations about results
- Comparisons with other lawyers' services that cannot be factually substantiated
For website content specifically, this means every practice area page, blog post, and case result description falls under 7.1 scrutiny. The rule doesn't distinguish between 'advertising' and 'content marketing' — if it's public-facing and discusses your legal services, it's subject to ethics review.
The practical implication for SEO: keyword-optimized content isn't exempt from ethics rules. A blog post ranking for 'best car accident lawyer in Houston' needs the same careful drafting as a paid advertisement making similar claims.
Many state bars have adopted Model Rule 7.1 with modifications, and some maintain their own distinct frameworks. California, for example, has historically operated under different advertising rules than states that adopted Model Rules directly. Always treat the ABA framework as a starting point, not the final word.