Three Model Rules form the foundation of attorney advertising compliance. Understanding these rules—and how your state modifies them—determines what you can legally say on your family law website.
Model Rule 7.1: Communications Concerning a Lawyer's Services
This rule prohibits false or misleading communications. For family lawyers, common violations include overstating win rates, implying designed to custody outcomes, or using superlatives like 'best divorce attorney' without substantiation. The rule applies to all marketing channels: your website, directory listings, social media, and paid advertising.
Model Rule 7.2: Communications Concerning a Lawyer's Services: Specific Rules
This rule addresses how lawyers can advertise and restrictions on paying for referrals. For SEO purposes, this impacts link building strategies—paying for links that pass PageRank from legal directories may trigger ethical scrutiny in some jurisdictions if the payment arrangement isn't disclosed.
Model Rule 7.3: Solicitation of Clients
While primarily targeting direct solicitation, this rule affects remarketing campaigns and personalized outreach. Family lawyers targeting users who visited divorce-related pages face heightened scrutiny because these prospects may be in emotionally vulnerable situations.
Note: This is educational content about advertising ethics, not legal advice. Verify current rules with your state bar and consult bar counsel before implementing marketing strategies.