This is educational content about advertising regulations, not legal or ethics advice. Verify current rules with your state bar's advertising compliance office.
The American Bar Association's Model Rules of Professional Conduct provide the framework that most state bars adapt for their own advertising regulations. Three rules matter most for criminal defense SEO:
Rule 7.1: Communications Concerning a Lawyer's Services
This is the rule that governs everything on your website. It prohibits false or misleading communications about you or your services. In SEO terms, this applies to:
- Title tags and meta descriptions
- Practice area page claims
- Attorney bio statements
- Case result descriptions
- Any claim about your experience, skills, or outcomes
Rule 7.2: Communications Concerning a Lawyer's Services—Specific Rules
This rule addresses how you can advertise, including requirements for firm name and contact information, rules about paying for recommendations, and restrictions on giving anything of value for referrals.
Rule 7.3: Solicitation of Clients
While primarily about direct solicitation, this rule affects how aggressively you can target potential clients online—particularly through remarketing, email campaigns, and chat solicitations.
The critical point: your state bar rules take precedence. Some states follow the Model Rules closely. Others have significant departures. California's rules, for example, differ substantially from New York's.