10 Costly Advertising Mistakes Australian Doctors Still Make (and How to Fix Them)
Why Medical Advertising Compliance Matters
Australian health advertising is tightly regulated. If you market a regulated health service (GP, specialist, dentist, cosmetic clinic, allied health), your website, socials, emails and ads must comply with the National Law (s 133), AHPRA’s Advertising Guidelines, and (when relevant) the TGA Advertising Code.
Below are the 10 mistakes we most often see - each with plain-English fixes you can implement today.
The mistake: Showcasing Google/Facebook reviews or patient quotes about treatment outcomes on your site or clinic-controlled socials.
Why it’s a problem: The National Law prohibits using testimonials about clinical aspects in advertising. You’re also responsible for removing testimonials from any advertising you control (including your clinic’s FB page).
Fix: Remove outcome-based reviews from ads and clinic-controlled pages. You may link neutrally to independent review platforms without quoting star counts. Add service descriptors and factual information instead.
The mistake: Naming or hinting at Schedule 4 products (e.g., “Botox”, “Juvederm”, “botulinum toxin”) or using abbreviations and colloquialisms in consumer-facing materials.
Why it’s a problem: The TGA prohibits advertising prescription-only medicines to the public. This includes indirect references (trade names, acronyms, colloquial terms). Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA)+2Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA)+2.
Fix: Use generic service descriptors only (e.g., “anti-wrinkle treatments”), and state that suitability is determined after medical consultation.
The mistake: Promising outcomes or comfort (e.g., “pain-free dentistry”, “get perfect skin instantly”).
Why it’s a problem: Advertising must not create an unreasonable expectation of beneficial treatment or mislead.
Fix: Reframe to aims/efforts, not guarantees: “gentle, comfort-focused care”; “results vary by individual”.
The mistake: “$100 off if you book today”, “VIP injectables discount” with no visible T&Cs.
Why it’s a problem: Offering an inducement is only permitted if the advertisement clearly states the terms & conditions; otherwise it breaches s 133.
Fix: Either remove the inducement for regulated services or display full, plain-language T&Cs beside the offer (not hidden). Ensure the offer does not pressure a healthcare decision.
The mistake: Pages that are all benefits and “what it treats” with little or nothing on risks, side-effects, suitability or variability.
Why it’s a problem: AHPRA expects advertising to be accurate, balanced and to include information about risks where relevant; omitting risks can mislead or create unrealistic expectations. AHPRA
Fix: Add a short, readable “Risks & Considerations” section to each treatment page and avoid minimizing language.
The mistake: Stating quantified benefits (e.g., “90% less radiation”, “clinically proven to erase X”) without holding acceptable evidence.
Why it’s a problem: Claims must be supported by acceptable evidence; otherwise they are potentially false or misleading.
Fix: Hold primary sources for any quantified claim, or soften to a factual, non-quantified statement that you can substantiate.
The mistake: Using protected titles or phrases like “specialist”, “specialises in”, “surgeon” outside the practitioner’s registered scope.
Why it’s a problem: Only those with the relevant registration can use protected titles or imply specialist registration.
Fix: Use accurate titles and scopes that match AHPRA registration. If you have advanced skills but not specialist registration, describe services factually without implying a specialty.
The mistake: Targeting higher-risk cosmetic procedures to under-18s, or failing to label social content as adult, or using prohibited content (e.g., sexualized imagery, time-limited pressure tactics).
Why it’s a problem: Cosmetic procedure guidelines ban targeting under-18s and require steps to limit exposure; the 2023–2025 updates tightened these controls.
Fix: Exclude under-18 audiences; flag content as adult where required; avoid time-pressured offers and glamorising content.
The mistake: Sharing before/after reels, resharing patient DMs, using trending audio with outcome claims, or leaving clinical testimonials on clinic-controlled pages.
Why it’s a problem: The same rules apply on social as in any advertising. You must moderate or remove non-compliant content you control.
Fix: Train your team/agency. Implement a pre-post checklist and comment moderation policy aligned to AHPRA/TGA rules.
The mistake: Using salesy CTAs (“Get younger now”), burying surgical risk disclaimers, or omitting a simple expectations statement.
Why it’s a problem: Overly promotional CTAs can create unreasonable expectations; missing or hard-to-find risk info can mislead.
Fix: Use neutral CTAs (“Book a consultation”, “Ask a question”). Add a visible line on treatment pages:
“Information is general in nature; suitability, risks and outcomes vary and are assessed during consultation.”
Worried your clinic’s ads might breach AHPRA or TGA rules?
Request a complimentary compliance pass — we’ll review your website, social posts, and ad copy for red flags.
Quick self-audit checklist
- No testimonials/star-ratings used to promote clinical outcomes. AHPRA
- No direct/indirect mentions of S4 medicines to the public. Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA)+1
- No absolute promises (“pain-free”, “guaranteed”, “instant”). AHPRA
- Inducements include clear, adjacent T&Cs (or removed). AustLII
- Benefits and risks presented; outcomes variability stated. AHPRA
- Claims backed by acceptable evidence (or rephrased). AHPRA
- Titles/specialist terms align with AHPRA registration. AHPRA
- Cosmetic procedure ads not targeted to U18; exposure limited. AHPRA
- Social channels moderated to the same standard as website. AHPRA
- Neutral CTAs + clear expectation disclaimer. AHPRA
Get Your Free AHPRA/TGA Compliance Pass
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GrowthGen Digital helps medical, dental, cosmetic, and allied health practices stay compliant while growing online visibility. We blend marketing expertise with deep knowledge of AHPRA and TGA advertising standards — so your campaigns are both compliant and effective.