The AVMA Principles of Veterinary Medical Ethics, specifically Section VIII, governs advertising for veterinary professionals. The language often causes more anxiety than it warrants when read carefully.
Section VIII states that advertising by veterinarians is ethical when it is not false, deceptive, or misleading. This is a prohibition on dishonesty—not on visibility. The AVMA explicitly acknowledges that the public benefits from information about veterinary services.
What's Actually Prohibited
- Claims of superiority that cannot be substantiated ("best veterinarian in the region")
- Misleading representations of credentials, specializations, or certifications
- Testimonials that imply designed to outcomes for medical procedures
- Bait-and-switch pricing or deceptive fee representations
What's Generally Permitted
- Descriptions of services, hours, location, and staff qualifications
- Factual statements about credentials and certifications you actually hold
- Educational content about pet health topics
- Client testimonials about service experience (not medical outcome guarantees)
- Pricing information that accurately reflects your fee structure
The AVMA framework exists to protect the public from deception—not to prevent veterinarians from having effective websites. This interpretation is general; consult the current AVMA guidelines and your state board for authoritative guidance.