FALSE & DECEPTIVE ADVERTISING LAW
They Lied to Make the Sale.
That\'s Illegal.
Our attorneys pursue false advertising, misleading claims, bait-and-switch tactics,
and deceptive marketing practices under FTC and state consumer protection laws.

Free case review — no obligation, no upfront fees.
Help with false claims, misleading ads, bait-and-switch & more.
Deceptive advertising attorneys in all 50 states.

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False & Deceptive Advertising Lawyer

If You Bought Something Based on a Lie, You May Have a Legal Claim.

False and deceptive advertising is one of the most common — and most tolerated — forms of consumer fraud. Companies routinely make claims they can't substantiate, advertise prices they don't honor, use before-and-after images that misrepresent results, and bury material conditions in fine print that contradicts the headline claim. Most consumers accept it as normal. It isn't — it's illegal.

The FTC Act prohibits unfair or deceptive acts in commerce. Every state has its own UDAP (Unfair and Deceptive Acts and Practices) statute that mirrors or expands those protections. Many of these laws allow consumers to recover actual damages, statutory damages, and attorney fees from businesses that misled them. A free case review can identify whether your situation gives rise to a viable claim.

Free consultation. Flat-fee and legal plan options. Deceptive advertising attorneys in all 50 states.

No retainer required to start.

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Free Case Review — No Obligation

FTC Act & State UDAP Statutes

Consumer Protection Attorneys in All 50 States

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⚠️ Signs You Were Misled by Advertising

Deceptive Advertising Takes Many Forms

The product or service you received was materially different from what was advertised in terms of quality, features, or results

An advertised price was not honored, or significant fees were added at checkout that weren't disclosed upfront

A "sale" price was based on an inflated or fictitious original price — the item was never actually sold at the higher price

Health, weight loss, financial return, or other outcome claims were made that the company cannot substantiate

You were offered a free trial or introductory offer with material conditions not clearly disclosed

Testimonials, reviews, or endorsements used in advertising were fake, paid, or otherwise not genuine

An advertised item was unavailable and you were pressured toward a higher-priced alternative (bait-and-switch)


A free case review determines whether the advertising that misled you crosses the legal line into actionable deception.

Types of Deceptive Advertising We Handle

From a Single Misleading Claim to Systematic Marketing Fraud

Bait-and-Switch

Advertising a product at an attractive price with no intention of selling it — then steering customers to a higher-priced alternative once they're engaged.

Unsubstantiated Performance Claims

Health benefits, weight loss results, earnings potential, or other outcome claims made without reliable scientific or empirical evidence to back them up.

Fictitious Pricing

"Was $200, now $79" — when the item was never actually sold at $200. Fake reference prices and inflated "original" prices are a common and illegal deceptive practice.

Fake Reviews & Endorsements

Paid or fabricated testimonials, fake review scores, undisclosed influencer relationships, or misleading celebrity endorsements used to influence purchase decisions.

Hidden Material Terms

Key conditions — cancellation restrictions, mandatory arbitration, significant exclusions — buried in fine print that contradicts or undermines the main advertised offer.

Greenwashing & False Certifications

False or misleading claims about environmental impact, organic ingredients, sustainability certifications, or product safety that influenced your purchase decision.

Health & Medical Advertising Fraud

Supplements, treatments, or medical devices marketed with false efficacy claims — including products that claim to cure, treat, or prevent conditions without FDA approval.

Education & Career Misrepresentation

Schools, training programs, or certification services that advertised job placement rates, salary outcomes, or accreditation status that were false or misleading.

Financial Product Misrepresentation

Loans, investments, insurance, or financial services marketed with misleading rate, return, or risk disclosures that influenced your decision to purchase.

What a Deceptive Advertising Attorney Does for You

You Shouldn't Have to Accept Being Misled as the Cost of Doing Business

Claim Evaluation

Reviews the advertising, your purchase, and the actual product or service against FTC standards and your state's UDAP statute to identify actionable violations.

Demand Letters

Sends formal legal demand to the advertiser or company — often enough to secure a refund or settlement without going to court.

Regulatory Complaints

Files complaints with the FTC, state attorney general, FDA (for health claims), or FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection — adding regulatory pressure alongside civil action.

Litigation

Files suit in federal or state court when warranted. Many state UDAP statutes provide for statutory damages and mandatory attorney fee recovery from the defendant.

Class Action Coordination

When deceptive advertising affects a large number of consumers with similar claims, class action litigation may be available — maximizing recovery and forcing systemic change.

Damages Recovery

Pursues actual damages, statutory damages, and in many cases attorney fee recovery from the company — making legal action viable even on individual purchases.

⚖️ Your Legal Service Options

Free Consultation Helps You Choose the Right Model

Legal Plan

From $26.95/Month

Ongoing attorney access covering advertising disputes plus any other legal matter. No retainer, no hourly fees for covered services.

Best for: Ongoing protection, families, multiple legal needs per year.

Flat-Fee Service

One Price Per Matter

Demand letter or regulatory complaint — quoted before work starts. No hourly surprises.

Best for: One specific dispute, defined scope.

Attorney Consultation

Hourly or Contingency

For complex cases or class action potential. Many state UDAP statutes allow attorney fee recovery from the defendant.

Best for: High-value claims, class action, complex litigation.

❓ Common Questions About Deceptive Advertising Claims

"Isn't exaggerated advertising just normal marketing?"
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There's a legal line between puffery (vague, non-specific boasting like "the best burger in town") and actionable deception (specific, measurable claims that are false or unsubstantiated). If the claim is specific — a price, a percentage improvement, a certification, a test result — and it's false, it crosses the legal line. A case review identifies which side of that line your situation falls on.

"The amount I lost is small — is it worth pursuing?"
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Possibly yes. State UDAP statutes often provide statutory damages per violation regardless of actual loss, and require attorney fee recovery from the defendant. A demand letter is also a low-cost first step that frequently produces a refund without any further legal action.

"I should have read the fine print — does that hurt my case?"
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Not necessarily. The law requires that material disclosures be clear and conspicuous — not buried in fine print that contradicts a prominent headline claim. If the fine print was designed to obscure rather than disclose, the disclosure may be legally insufficient regardless of whether you read it.

"Can I file a complaint with the FTC myself?"
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Yes — you can file a complaint at ReportFraud.ftc.gov. However, FTC complaints don't result in individual compensation; the FTC uses them to identify patterns for enforcement actions. To recover your own losses, you need to pursue a civil claim under UDAP or common law fraud. An attorney handles both the regulatory complaint and your individual civil claim simultaneously.

"What if the company is still running the same ads?"
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Ongoing deceptive advertising strengthens your case and may support a claim for injunctive relief in addition to damages — asking the court to order the company to stop the advertising practice. Regulatory complaints to the FTC and state AG can also trigger enforcement actions that stop the ads.

"How long do I have to file a claim?"
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Statutes of limitation for UDAP claims typically range from 1–4 years from discovery of the deception, depending on the state. Don't assume you've missed the window — a free case review confirms whether your claim is still timely.

Deceptive Advertising Legal Help — Free Case Review, No Obligation

They Profited From Misleading You. The Law Gives You a Way to Fight Back.

Free case review. Legal plans from $26.95/month. Flat-fee for defined matters. Consumer protection attorneys in all 50 states. No retainer required.

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