The ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct establish the baseline framework for attorney advertising, though your state bar's specific rules govern actual compliance. Rule 7.1 is the foundation: attorneys cannot make false or misleading communications about themselves or their services.
For family law SEO, this means every claim on your website—from title tags to case descriptions—must be truthful and not create unjustified expectations. Common violations we see:
- Implying custody outcomes are predictable or designed to
- Claiming 'aggressive representation' without context that could mislead about legal process
- Using superlatives like 'best divorce attorney' without substantiation
- Listing practice areas as 'specializations' without board certification
Rule 7.2 addresses advertising generally, allowing most digital marketing while prohibiting payment for recommendations (with limited exceptions). Rule 7.3 restricts solicitation—relevant for remarketing campaigns targeting users who visited competitor sites or searched for divorce attorneys.
Rules 7.4 and 7.5 govern specialization claims and firm names. Many states only allow 'specialist' or 'certified' language if you hold actual certification from an accredited body. Generic SEO advice to 'position yourself as an expert' directly conflicts with these requirements.
This is educational content about advertising rules, not legal advice. Verify current requirements with your state bar and firm counsel.