1. What Is Advertising and Marketing Law: Core Legal Standards
Advertising and marketing law rests on the principle that commercial speech must not mislead consumers or competitors through false, unsubstantiated, or deceptive claims. The Federal Trade Commission Act Section 5 prohibits unfair or deceptive acts or practices; state consumer protection statutes and common law fraud principles impose parallel duties. Courts distinguish between actionable deception (a material misrepresentation or omission that deceives a reasonable consumer) and permissible puffery (subjective opinion or exaggeration that no reasonable consumer would treat as a factual claim).
From a practitioner's perspective, the boundary between puffery and deception is one of the most contested areas in advertising disputes. A claim such as the best pizza in town typically qualifies as non-actionable opinion, whereas a claim that a product cures arthritis without scientific support crosses into deception. The FTC and state authorities scrutinize substantiation: if a marketer makes an express or implied claim about product efficacy, safety, or performance, the advertiser must possess competent and reliable evidence supporting that claim before the advertisement runs.
| Legal Standard | Definition | Typical Consequence |
| Deceptive Advertising | Material misrepresentation or omission that misleads a reasonable consumer | Injunction, civil penalty, corrective advertising, consumer refund |
| Unfair Advertising | Practice that causes or is likely to cause substantial consumer injury not reasonably avoidable | FTC enforcement action, state AG action, private damages suit |
| Permissible Puffery | Subjective opinion or exaggeration a reasonable consumer would not treat as fact | Generally no liability |
| Inadequate Substantiation | Failure to possess competent evidence for performance or safety claims before publication | Corrective advertising order, civil penalty, injunction |
2. What Is Advertising and Marketing Law: Enforcement and Remedies
Advertising disputes arise in three primary enforcement contexts: federal FTC action, state attorney general or consumer protection bureau enforcement, and private civil litigation. Each pathway carries distinct procedural rules and remedies.
Federal Trade Commission Enforcement
The FTC investigates and brings administrative complaints against advertisers for unfair or deceptive practices. The agency may issue cease-and-desist orders, impose civil penalties (now up to $43,792 per violation as of 2024, adjusted annually), order corrective advertising, and seek consumer redress. The FTC's substantiation doctrine requires advertisers to maintain and produce evidence supporting performance claims before the agency or in court. Failure to comply with an FTC order can result in additional civil penalties and contempt liability.
State-Level Enforcement and Consumer Protection Statutes
New York General Business Law Section 349 prohibits deceptive practices in consumer transactions. The state attorney general and county consumer protection offices investigate complaints, issue subpoenas, and pursue injunctive relief and civil penalties. Private consumers may also bring lawsuits under Section 349 or common law fraud. In practice, delays in documenting consumer injury (receipts, photographs, correspondence) or notice timing can complicate what remedies a court may address at summary judgment or trial, particularly in higher-volume consumer courts in New York County or Kings County.
Private Civil Litigation
Competitors or consumers may sue for deceptive advertising under the Lanham Act (federal trademark and false advertising claims), state consumer protection statutes, common law fraud, unjust enrichment, or tortious interference. Plaintiffs must prove materiality (the misrepresentation affected the purchasing decision), reliance, and damages. The substantiation burden typically falls on the advertiser; if the defendant cannot produce evidence supporting a claim, that failure may support summary judgment for the plaintiff or support a jury inference of deception.
3. What Is Advertising and Marketing Law: Permissible Puffery and Comparative Claims
Not all exaggeration or subjective language violates advertising law. Courts recognize a category of permissible puffery, meaning statements that express subjective opinion, use hyperbole, or make comparisons that a reasonable consumer would not interpret as factual assertions. The distinction turns on whether the average consumer would view the statement as a verifiable fact or as non-actionable opinion.
Puffery Vs. Actionable Misrepresentation
Statements like America's favorite brand or finest craftsmanship are typically puffery because no reasonable consumer would treat them as verifiable facts. By contrast, a claim that a product contains no artificial preservatives when it does is a factual misrepresentation. The Restatement of Torts and case law recognize that some product categories (beauty, taste, durability) naturally invite subjective language, whereas health, safety, and performance claims are more readily treated as factual and subject to substantiation demands.
Comparative Advertising and Substantiation
Advertisers may compare their product favorably to competitors, provided the comparison is truthful and substantiated. A claim that our product outperforms Brand X in durability testing requires the advertiser to possess competent evidence of that testing. Comparative advertising disputes often hinge on whether the underlying test was methodologically sound, whether the comparison was material to consumer choice, and whether the advertiser disclosed material limitations of the test (e.g., sample size, conditions, time frame).
4. What Is Advertising and Marketing Law: Procedural Considerations in Dispute Resolution
When advertising disputes reach litigation or administrative review, procedural posture and evidence management become critical. Advertisers and plaintiffs must establish timely notice, proper service, and a clear record of the challenged advertisement and supporting (or absent) substantiation.
Discovery and Substantiation Records in New York Courts
In federal and New York state court litigation, the advertiser's internal files regarding substantiation, testing, and claim approval become central discovery targets. Courts treat the absence of pre-publication substantiation as probative of deception or negligence. In practice, advertisers who cannot produce contemporaneous test reports, expert opinions, or internal approvals face significant summary judgment risk. The discovery process also requires production of all versions of the advertisement, internal communications about claim drafting, and competitive intelligence that may have informed the advertisement's positioning.
Administrative Procedure before the Ftc
FTC administrative proceedings follow formal adjudication rules. The agency issues a complaint alleging unfair or deceptive practice; the respondent (advertiser) may request a hearing before an administrative law judge. The burden of proof rests on the FTC to establish the violation by a preponderance of evidence. The respondent may challenge the FTC's jurisdiction, the sufficiency of substantiation standards applied by the agency, and the materiality of the alleged misrepresentation. Appeals from the ALJ proceed to the full FTC Commission, which may affirm, modify, or reverse. The Commission's order becomes final unless reviewed by a federal appellate court.
5. What Is Advertising and Marketing Law: Key Strategic Considerations
Businesses should evaluate several forward-looking steps to reduce advertising liability risk. First, establish a substantiation protocol: before any performance, safety, or health claim is published, document the competent and reliable evidence supporting that claim (test results, expert opinions, published research). Second, create a written approval process for advertising copy so that internal stakeholders and legal counsel review claims for truthfulness and substantiation before launch. Third, maintain organized files of all advertising materials, substantiation documents, and internal communications; disorganized or missing records invite adverse inferences in litigation. Fourth, monitor competitor claims and consumer complaints; early detection of a false claim by a competitor or consumer injury can prompt swift corrective action or documented response. Finally, consider whether disclaimers, qualifications, or material limitations of comparative claims should be disclosed upfront to avoid implied deception through selective presentation.
14 May, 2026









