Home / Insights / AHPRA Rules & Your Website
AHPRA advertising rules and your website: a plain-English guide
Published July 2026 · By Manon Vernay
If you are a registered health practitioner in Australia, your website counts as advertising, and advertising a regulated health service comes with rules under the National Law.
Here is the plain-English version of what trips people up. This is general information, not legal advice: the authoritative source is Ahpra's advertising hub, and when in doubt, check it or ask your professional body.
What this means for your website in practice
Trust has to be built differently. What still works, and works well: plain description of who you help and how sessions run, your qualifications and registrations stated accurately, fees published clearly, a warm and professional design, photos of you and the practice, and content that shows expertise rather than claims it.
This is exactly how we approach allied health builds.
The most common website mistakes we see
Testimonial sliders carried over from an old template. "Best physio in [suburb]" in a page title (superlative plus clinical service). Embedded Google review widgets pulling clinical testimonials straight into the site. Blog posts promising outcomes to rank for search terms.
Risky phrase, safer phrase
The pattern that helps practitioners most is seeing the rewrite. As general information rather than compliance advice:
- "Get your life back" becomes "Support for the things you are finding hard right now"
- "Proven results for anxiety" becomes "Experienced in supporting clients with anxiety"
- "Sydney's best physio" becomes "Physiotherapy in [suburb] since 2015"
- "Pain-free in three sessions" becomes "A clear plan from your first session"
- "Read what our patients say" (clinical quotes) becomes credentials, approach, fees, and a photo of the practice
The pattern behind every rewrite: describe what you do and who for, never what outcome the next patient should expect. When a sentence promises a feeling or a result, it is advertising an outcome; when it describes a service, it is just information.